1) They're unlikely to be sentient (few neurons, immobile)
2) If they are sentient, the farming practices look likely to be pretty humane
3) They're extremely nutritionally dense
Buying canned smoked oysters/mussels and eating them plain or on crackers is super easy and cheap.
It's an acquired taste for some, but I love them.
This is a good suggestion.
My (limited) understanding is that scallops might be even better than oysters and mussels as they are typically larger (so fewer are killed to obtain a given quantity of protein)
and are possibly even less neurally developed(edit: this seems wrong - see below)I also wonder about wider ecosystem impacts. As @Vasco Grilo🔸 has suggested, the impact on soil invertebrates may dominate the moral value of farming on the land - but there is huge uncertainty.
I'd be surprised if there is a similarly large population of aquatic organisms that are impacted by the farming of bivalves (scallops, oysters, mussels). If so, they may be a more morally robust option than any land-derived option, whether animal or plant. But I've not researched this at all (I've tagged Vasco in case this is something he wants to look into!)
Thanks, this is helpful. I think I was wrong, and as you/Diana suggest scallops actually have a more developed nervous system than mussels