Musciame was made on board ship by the sailors and fishermen of the
Ligurian and
Versilian coast, in north-west Italy. Strips of
dolphin meat were salted, then hung by a string from the
mast to dry in the sun for about a week. The result had the appearance of a small log charred by fire. The meat was black, and became hard if kept for long. Musciame may not legally be sold or produced in Italy. Intentional killing of dolphins is prohibited by the
Habitats Directive of the
European Union, 92/43/CEE. Under the terms of EU regulation 338/97, where
cetaceans are listed in Appendix A, it is illegal to buy, sell or obtain dolphin meat. In 2014, after an
exposé by an investigative reporter from the television programme
Le Iene, the
Guardia Costiera and the port authorities of
Civitavecchia confiscated vacuum-packed musciame destined to be secretly served in a restaurant in the area, and investigated those responsible for trafficking in it. In the same year, the corpse of a young
bottlenose dolphin was found butchered on a beach at
Golfo Aranci in
Sardinia; the , the national league for the protection of animals, said that it had been slaughtered for musciame. According to a report published in 2015 by the , the Italian anti-vivisection league, illegal killing of dolphins for musciame production continues. == Consumption ==