Do you think any anyone would want to live in a studio apartment or a luxery 7000sq foot home?
Do you think any animal would like to live in a 29g or an open ocean?
Uh, I think that some animals would be perfectly happy in a 29. If their territory in the wild is about the size of a 29 and the water conditions, food etc are the same, then I think they would be fine.
You apply human standards to creatures that have a completely different view of what is their "want" vs. their "need". Survival is the goal of such creatures until they satisfy their basic food needs. Their next level of need is to reproduce if they have adequate nutrition and potential mates (or just divide if they don't need mates). Based on their needs for acquisition of adequate nutrition and acquiring potential mates, territory may be established. It is highly unlikely that such creatures have "wants" for the wide open sea, and may even find lower stress and higher security in smaller, less open home environments. Some creatures have very small territories based on their nutritional needs, some have much larger needs, but regardless, reducing their environmental volume to less than their specie minumum induces stress and may lead to disease. What exists beyond their territory is of little interest to most fishes unless it applies to the acquisition or defense of the primary needs for these organisms. This makes the "7000 sq ft apartment" analogy superfluous, as maintaining such a large territory is wasteful of the acquired nutrition. Darwinian selection has weeded out those creatures that waste energy without significant gain. Very few lower vertebrates are capable of sustaining Maslov's Hierarchy of Needs, you have anthropomorphized creatures that do not have that capability.Reefguide":33mp5anm said:No, sorry, I just don't agree.
Why don't you agree. I have three ocelaris clowns that NEVER stray more that .5 feet from their anemone. Except for bebore I put the anemone in the tank. I have a 8 foot tank. Certainly for my clowns, this is not needed.Reefguide":1jynfkzu said:Uh, I think that some animals would be perfectly happy in a 29. If their territory in the wild is about the size of a 29 and the water conditions, food etc are the same, then I think they would be fine.
No, sorry, I just don't agree.
I'm going to drop the topic. I not at all interested in agruging anymore about this. Preety soon someone is gonna piss someone off and I don't think it's worth it. Maybe you guys are right, whatever the case, I'm done talking about it.
SPC":3t1vy3tj said:Uh, I think that some animals would be perfectly happy in a 29. If their territory in the wild is about the size of a 29 and the water conditions, food etc are the same, then I think they would be fine.
Briand":3t1vy3tj said:you don't see how the fish you keep suffer
my view is that we should attempt to provide the optimum environment for our fish, not the minimum that we can get away with.
reefguide":3t1vy3tj said:we need to frown on the whole aquarium hobbie as a whole.
So why not just take a stand against the aquarium trade
aquarist=broke":3t1vy3tj said:If we really want animals to stop being killed or whatever, then maybe we should just stop this all together.
Perhaps we all need a refresher in the "ENVIRONMENT" that we provide our inhabitants.
http://www.animalnetwork.com/fish2/aqfm ... efault.asp
reefguide wrote:
we need to frown on the whole aquarium hobbie as a whole.
So why not just take a stand against the aquarium trade
I have posted similar to the above statements by Reefguide, when somebody's mandarin fish was eaten by an anemone.
aquarist=broke wrote:
If we really want animals to stop being killed or whatever, then maybe we should just stop this all together.
SPC":39zamrrz said:-And your point is?
reefguide wrote:
we need to frown on the whole aquarium hobbie as a whole.
So why not just take a stand against the aquarium trade
I have posted similar to the above statements by Reefguide, when somebody's mandarin fish was eaten by an anemone.
aquarist=broke wrote:
If we really want animals to stop being killed or whatever, then maybe we should just stop this all together.
aquarist=broke":39zamrrz said:I have only been coming here for a few months, and with only 30 or so odd posts I tend not to answer these really deep issues, but I was telling my co-workers about this issue and they said I should add to it. It's just that alot of people hate when something in a tank dies because of a "lame" aquarist's idea. Be it trial and error(which I think we are all guilty of somehow), or experience we have developed from years, we are the reason people are trying to have aquariums. Somebody had to use trial and error for any of the things we do and don't do in this hobby. If we really want animals to stop being killed or whatever, then maybe we should just stop this all together. I really don't want to stop because I have been successful thus far, however if I infrequently had animals die because of my care, or lack thereof, then I would definately QUITas much as I would hate to......
my 2 cents.....
Reefguide":zgw68nr2 said:Minh,
Did you miss my post??
I'm going to drop the topic. I not at all interested in agruging anymore about this. Preety soon someone is gonna piss someone off and I don't think it's worth it. Maybe you guys are right, whatever the case, I'm done talking about it.
Maybe you lack basic comprehension skills or your one of these guys thats keeps getting in people faces after they have said that they refuse to argue further. I'm done talking about it.
The point was that everyone is so concerned about providing the best environment for the animals we keep, but if you even looked at the data, you would see that unless you have something like a 50X50 foot net out in the ocean that you "maintain", then you aren't providing the optimal environment.
I really don't feel superior to you Steve, I respect your {squats}. I just think that if we want to accuse somebody of not providing for their animals, we should look first at ourselves. Don't you think?
Briand":3suqvv07 said:Additionally, my view is that we should attempt to provide the optimum environment for our fish, not the minimum that we can get away with.
SPC":3suqvv07 said:if this was a real concern then our animals would be dying from this. Tangs in a 29 gallon tank die each day and there is a reason for this.
I can imagine how many loony people never even come to places like these to learn beforehand what they're getting into. I think those loonies are the ones that come here after their pretty yellow fish is skinny and swimming in cartwheels.Briand":32qp4zcy said:Check out some of the current "I bought a powder blue tang and now it has ich" and you will see why I get so irritated at people for decisions they make, REGARDLESS of the ample evidence provided to them of the impact stocking levels have on frequency of parasitic infections and disease.