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John_Brandt

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The better aquarium: lights, coral - no cyanide


By Mark Clayton
The Christian Science Monitor
January 13, 2005


Swimming in Joe Scavo's basement aquarium are seven brightly colored fish that once swam in the Pacific but now glide past a carefully tended mini-reef. They feed on shrimp and scallops. High-intensity lights mimic the tropical sun.

Nothing is too good for his fish - except, perhaps, how they were caught.

Mr. Scavo and a growing number of hobbyists worry that some of the fish they buy - for $25 to $100 apiece - may have been captured using knockout poisons that damage or destroy ocean reefs. Now, they're getting some help from an unusual alliance. Industry and environmental groups are pressing ahead with a system to ensure that wild ornamental fish are caught and marketed in a sustainable way.

"We're trying to show that, using a responsible approach, you can promote a healthy reef and fish populations," says Paul Holthus, executive director of the Marine Aquarium Council (MAC), an alliance of industry and environmental groups, based in Honolulu, that aims to solve the problem at its origin.

In the early 1980s, reports revealed fishermen in the South Pacific switching from nets to cyanide to capture many marine fish destined for home aquariums in the United States and around the world. By squirting the poison into coral formations, divers stunned the ornamental fish, making them easy to catch. But the cyanide also damaged and killed the coral, sickened and killed other fish, and often harmed the divers, too.

Enthusiasts like Scavo had no way of knowing how the South Pacific species they bought had been captured. In the United States, legislation to ban imported marine fish surfaced briefly in Congress a few years ago. But hobbyists and the industry say the best way to save the reefs is to encourage good fishing practices in the region.

p14a.jpg

A CLOWN FISH swims near anemones in a coral reef off the coast of Fiji. Some local fisherman use cyanide to stun and capture such exotic fish. Environmental and pet-industry groups are steering fishermen to use more benign net techniques. Photo by Melanie Stetson Freeman - Staff



So in 2001, industry and environmental groups including the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council, World Wildlife Fund, and Nature Conservancy, launched MAC. It educates villagers in the South Pacific about the danger of cyanide use and reeducates them in net-fishing techniques. To win MAC certification, fishing companies and communities have to use best-practices reef management.

"In many cases, they weren't doing destructive fishing, but they didn't have adequate storage facilities or aerators in their boats," says Marshall Meyers, executive vice president of the Pet Industry Joint Advisory Council, the Washington lobby group that supports MAC certification. "So we had to show them how to do that."

Aerators and storage tanks ensure that the fish survive once they're caught. Importers have a host of requirements. So do retailers, whose stores must track and report fish mortality and are subject to inspections. The system helps consumers know which fish have been harvested and transported in sustainable ways.

So far, the elaborate system has been slow to catch on. Only 21 companies in nine nations are MAC-certified. But the governments of Fiji and the Philippines - which supply more than 80 percent of ornamental fish - are on board, Mr. Holthus says. Fresh funding this year promises to allow MAC to triple the number of South Pacific workers training fishing communities in Fiji, the Philippines, Indonesia, and other island nations, Mr. Meyers says.

Such initiatives promise to be more important as the hobby grows.

Ownership of exotic fish, once beyond reach for many, has risen, propelled by "Finding Nemo" and other popular movies about fish, a growing number of public aquariums, and cheaper equipment. Worldwide trade in 1,400-plus species of fish - 20 million to 24 million salt-water ornamental fish overall - is a $300 million industry, MAC estimates. Some say it may be larger than that.

Here in the US, although fewer than 1 percent of households have marine aquariums, the number has been growing 2 percent a year since the late 1990s, according to the pet advisory council.

"Not too many hobbyists are aware that some of the fish purchased at stores were caught with toxic chemicals, which is horrifying to us," says Randy Goodlett, northeast region director of American Marinelife Dealers Association in Pittsburgh, part of the MAC alliance. "Some try not to think about it; others are trying to reform the industry."

Scavo, for example, has spent the past six years traveling around New England, quizzing retailers about where their fish were caught and what methods were used in their capture, transport, and shipment. The information he gathers goes to more than 500 members of the Boston Reefers, a club of marine aquarium hobbyists who want to know where the best fish and best practices are, says Scavo, the club's president.

"I've been in touch with every fish store from here to New York," he says. "My organization is all for ethically caught anything."

Instead of vetting stores himself, Scavo would prefer to be able to ask for "MAC certified" fish. He can't do that because the nearest MAC store is in New Jersey. Only five marine aquarium retailers in four states - Florida, Illinois, Michigan, and New Jersey - are MAC-certified.

At Absolutely Fish in Clifton, N.J., which tracks all fish from MAC suppliers and their survival rates, the process has been challenging - but rewarding.

"I had a guy come in recently looking for particular fish," says Patrick Donston, the owner. "We were talking about the cyanide problem. And he said, 'I heard you guys don't buy those fish.' People know that drug-caught fish are not healthy. They care very much, they really do."

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0113/p14s01-sten.html
 

Kalkbreath

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If the percent of household with marine aquariums is growing at 2 percent a year........how can the current level be one percent?
Here in the US, although fewer than 1 percent of households have marine aquariums, the number has been growing 2 percent a year since the late 1990s, according to the pet advisory council.
 
A

Anonymous

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Kalkbreath":36cj929v said:
If the percent of household with marine aquariums is growing at 2 percent a year........how can the current level be one percent?
Here in the US, although fewer than 1 percent of households have marine aquariums, the number has been growing 2 percent a year since the late 1990s, according to the pet advisory council.

Somebody failed calculus :lol:
 

dizzy

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John_Brandt":9idekxvz said:
p14a.jpg

A CLOWN FISH swims near anemones in a coral reef off the coast of Fiji. Some local fisherman use cyanide to stun and capture such exotic fish. Environmental and pet-industry groups are steering fishermen to use more benign net techniques. Photo by Melanie Stetson Freeman - Staff

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0113/p14s01-sten.html[/url]

The above caption would lead one to believe there is a cyanide problem in Fiji.
Mitch
 

clarionreef

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John,
Of course there is no cyanide in Fiji.
Its just a litmus test for the veracity of a simple, sketchy article...you know like the 2% a year growth that equals 1% so far.
Its a begginers fluff piece of the kind that has been put out for 20 years now.
I especially found Marshall Meyers contributions amusing. "WE had to show em how to do that"...he says. :lol:
Its 2005 now....just how much mileage can you possibly get out of recycling beggining cyanide banter year after year.
I just wish there were fish to go with the fluff...after all these years and false starts...seriously.
The MAC administrative costs vs. the field budget is a proverbial inverted pyramid and extremely revealing as to where the priorities actually lie.
Supporting years of wishful mission statements and failed effort is not the same as supporting credible, genuine competent achievement.
Only non professionals are fooled by this stuff...and the few professionals that accept it do so tongue in cheek for the "get out of jail free" status it confers on them and the years of cheap and painless involvement it allows without having to really do anything but mix in a few gobies and clownfish with their cyanide angelfish, blue tangs and clown triggers.
The coral that dies YEARLY from a thousand cyanide fisherman while this slow motion flute plays is staggering and adding up.
The patient is fading away as this environmental malpractice seduces the occasional visitor out in the lobby and assures him that all is OK. Since its they want to hear anyway, it sounds...well OK.

God forbid you ever endure an independant field audit from people who actually know whats going on.


Steve
AMDA president
 

Kalkbreath

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galleon":jcp6ww3e said:
Kalkbreath":jcp6ww3e said:
If the percent of household with marine aquariums is growing at 2 percent a year........how can the current level be one percent?
Here in the US, although fewer than 1 percent of households have marine aquariums, the number has been growing 2 percent a year since the late 1990s, according to the pet advisory council.

Somebody failed calculus :lol:
Okey....... ....You got me. Its the one percent has been increasing at 2 percent........But I still dont follow the math
the hobby has more then doubled since the early 1990s ...Both in volume and number of retail stores selling marine.
For some reason the artical limits the data period to the late 1990s to today?
.....at two percent a year for the last seven , eight or nine years {however late in the ninties they started the data] your not going to see much of an increase in the percent of households with MO tanks.
The current percent of households is what?
The author was bold enough to suggest that its now Twenty five percent greater then what it was in the late 1990s?"Thats not a very concrete number! "
Less the one percent" can mean one millionth of one percent or just short of a full one percent.
Why is it that as a hobby we still have little idea how many hobbyists there are in the USA.
How many tanks does All Glass and Oceanic sell per year?
How many bags of salt were sold in the USA last year?
 

spawner

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As it is written in the story

1% + 2%/year = 0.01 * 0.02 = 0.0102

Gee, 10 years of college and this is what it gets me.

andy
 

JeremyR

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Yeah, if the number of hobbyists is below 1% of the population, it can grow by more than 2% a year and still not become a significant % of the population.

Not saying it's not a stupid article, but you don't need calculus to do the math on that statistic :P
 

naesco

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Has there been a corresponding increase in the wild stock of fish and coral, inverts and live rock to cover these increases?
 

mkirda

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John_Brandt":3r346gwl said:
{snip}" says Randy Goodlett, northeast region director of American Marinelife Dealers Association in Pittsburgh, part of the MAC alliance.

Is AMDA part of the MAC alliance?

That and the cyanide in Fiji thing stick out like, well, a sumo wrestler wearing a pink tutu.

Regards.
Mike Kirda
 

mkirda

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horge":2pgo9pxb said:
I dunno, Mike.
Have you ever SEEN a sumo wrestler in a pink tutu?

Mabuhay,
HCJorge

Mabuhay, Horge.

I've seen more real, live sumo wrestlers than I have MAC-certified fish...
Granted, they were all dressed in very large, but fairly drab suits, but such was the fashion in Japan in the late 80's...

Point being, cyanide fishing hasn't been a problem in Fiji, the reports of any use of it have been rare, sporadic, and unverified, -and- we're all hoping it stays that way.

Regards.
Mike Kirda
 

mkirda

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naesco":iraecomd said:
Has there been a corresponding increase in the wild stock of fish and coral, inverts and live rock to cover these increases?

Well, if you are asking about pan-regionally, I would have to say that the increase in LR in just one day (Dec. 26th) will be enough to supply the world for many decades to come.

The rest went down that day.
 

clarionreef

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You sure got that right Mike,

Nature just manufactured live rock on a scale as to boggle the imagination and negate the "save the coral reef" hype w/ reference to the environmental virtues of 'farming it'.

All thruout Latin America, siltation from agri-business has created entire coastlines of 'live rock'...
Mexico banned both live and cultured rock because of a misunderstood hype about it that they pulled off the internet.
They decided to "save it" as a result. I remember a meeting in a fishery officials office where he asked me to bring some 'live rock' in to see what they had "saved".
Soon after, a terrible storm caused an epic run-off that covered one of the best reef areas in the Cabo Pulmo National Park...killing thousands of old coral heads. Today, thats a 1,000,000 ton live rock field...but protected of course.

"Saving" the easiest stuff to milk to maximum "conservation advantage" is a subject area I wish people would understand better.

If understood...the effects of the tsunami reveals more then we may want to know. It should rank-order things better in priorities for people to think about.

Steve

PS Perhaps an explosion of tangs and rabbitfishes and other algae eaters is on the way. If so, at least the people can eat em...as they grow pretty fast.
 

mkirda

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cortez marine":1c42fuhi said:
Perhaps an explosion of tangs and rabbitfishes and other algae eaters is on the way. If so, at least the people can eat em...as they grow pretty fast.

Blonde Naso tang steamed, then dipped in a little homemade vinegar and chili is quite tasty... I recommend them to every fish store owner who has one for sale... :lol:

Mike
 

horge

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Wayne :roll:
Labajitas/Surgeonfish ---particularly genus Naso-- are a major food fish in most countries. Steamed, sure. Lightly poached in coconut 'milk', ginger, a touch of curry and chili pepper... even better.

Hi ya Mike,
The lies and errors circulated in the marine aquarium trade ---and moreso the marine enviromentalist circus-- are so frequently generated and frequently durable that sometimes, they don't stick out for me anyomore.
I've seen more real, live sumo wrestlers than I have MAC-certified fish...
Can't say the same, buddy. Well, I mean, if an outfit has all the paper and sticker-thingies...
then all those fish they shipped must be MAC certified, right?


+
 

clarionreef

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Horge,
I wish that BFAR would just take the attitude that their counterpart in Mexico has regarding the fish trade;
Its our country and our fisheries. We will manage it and set policy. You may not participate without the appropriate work visas. If you do not receive them you are a tourist and must behave as such.
We do not sip-sip to your agenda ..it is you who must conform to ours.
I cannot imagine outside NGOs 'working' Mexican fisheries as they have done in the Philippines.
Homegrown leadership could make this whole circus obsolete.

Steve
 

JT

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Blonde Naso and Parrotfish on the BBQ are nice but I still prefer a nicely sauted T. gigas clam.

- JT
 

clarionreef

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Wayne,
I'm going to tell some divers I know in Bali that you Canadians eat warm blooded baby cows. You know, the ones with the big beautiful eyes and 1 1/2 inch eyelashes.
They are so cute and trusting...so innocent and close to their mothers.
Obviously a blank, fixed eyed cold-blooded unicorn tang is not the equal of a little holstien now is it?
Steve
CC. PETA
 

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