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How a Chinese delicacy got caught in the crossfire of Trump’s trade war

SUQUAMISH, Wash. (AP) 鈥 For over two decades, Suquamish tribal member Joshua George has dived into the emerald waters of the Salish Sea looking for an unusually phallic clam that鈥檚 coveted thousands of miles away.

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How a Chinese delicacy got caught in the crossfire of Trump's trade war

Daniel McRae unloads a bag of harvested geoduck clams from his brother, Derrick McRae, on their boat near Illahee State Park in Bremerton, Wash., on Tuesday, April 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson)


SUQUAMISH, Wash. (AP) 鈥 For over two decades, Suquamish tribal member Joshua George has dived into the emerald waters of the Salish Sea looking for an unusually phallic clam that鈥檚 coveted thousands of miles away.

George is a geoduck diver. the world鈥檚 largest burrowing clam has been harvested in tidelands by George鈥檚 Indigenous ancestors in the Pacific Northwest since before Europeans arrived.

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