John,
I find this thread very interesting, the issue here, gives us a good idea of how well the problem, specially at community level, is known.
The industry, and others, have been talking about one importan issue as is the unnecessary mortality at collector level based on anecdotical information or guesstimates. For those with scientific background, you know what is the value of that kind of information. No ONE study has been done on this issue. It must be known the % of fish dying because of poor handling and holding at community level.
Today, hundreds of fish collectors in the Philippines, Indonesia and most of developing countries where collection for the trade is taking place, are using the old and unexpensive technique of the plastic bag to keep their fish until the middlemen/women go to the community to pick up the fish.
This link, the middlemen/women, can not be ignored, as stated by Monet from Brem in Manila, they (middlemen/women) are the culprit of the trade, good net caught fish have to wait many days in plastic bags(without water changes) until the number of collected fish justifies renting a truck.
The ordeal of net caught fish starts when it is removed from the reef. But this is only the start of its miseries. Once ashore, there are no holding facilities and submerged cages are not widespread because of the lack of protected areas, the tides and theft. Thus the fish are dumped from the plastic bags in to a bucket with up to 30 fish at once. The fish are then transferred abruptly into used and dirty bags filled with new water from the shoreline. Depending on the species, they are bagged individually if they are expensive, or by pairs in smaller bags, or several in larger bags . I saw a large bag with 10 Lion fish, the water was that cloudy (because NH3) that you couldn't see the fish. The bagged fish remain on the floor or on wooden structures from 5 to 7 days before they are shipped. During this time, water is changed once a day. Expensive fish get two water changes a day. The water changes are always abrupt. Small inexpensive fish do not get water changes for 5-7 days. I saw 15 fragil butterflyfish per bag and more than 70 damselfish in the same bag. It is common to see fish dying fro ammonia poisoning in the bag. This is ONLY one step of the trade. It is not a nightmare is reality
I find that water quality criteria is one of the most important aspects when keeping fish in captivity. However, this aspect has been forgotten, I'd say neglected, at the most important level of the trade, the collection stations or fishers communitiies.
It is a fact that less cyanide is being used by collectors, but the damage inflicted to the daily catch at community level could be as bad or even worse.
Jaime
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