I used to work in an aquatic shop. I used to go to my wholesaler every week and be stunned by the number of species on offer. I was always told that they were all net caught, no cyanide or dynamite was used, avoiding loss was top of the agenda. It's bull shit. I've witnessed boxes of livestock being opened and everything is dead, fish, inverts everything. The trade is awful, no one cares about the long term state of the oceans, it's all about profit from the top down. The trade is sick, end of.
Targeting prereproductive juveniles is a well known problem with the industry. For $50 a year, collectors take as much as they want from Hawaii's reefs with no limits on the species or numbers of fish taken. Targeted species populations have plummeted in many areas, in fact 2 butterflyfish species have crashed in areas of Kona where most of the collecting occurs. Collectors claim to have the best intentions for the resource, but continue to strip mine. The State allows and even supports it.
While you raise some valid points (such as the value of aquaculture) the bias in this video undeniable.
Several factual inaccuracies are present and you have blatently failed to sight any of your resources. In particular, the reference to the collection of juvenile fish demonstrates a frank ignorance to the population dynamics of reef fish. The collection of juvenile specimins minimises population impact as it has relatively little impact on the reproductive potential of the population.
This video speaks to an ultra pessimistic version of the truth. It is a distortion of reality which uses mixed data sets, supposition and poorly thought out conclusions to pursue by a preconceived agenda of eliminating the wild marine aquarium industry. It will be a monumental effort to develop aquaculture techinques without the participation of dedicated hobbyists. Mariculture of corals made leaps and bounds based on hobbyist contribution to the science.
Cool concept but not true. I am a collector and disagree with your tactics. If more than 3 % died after collection we would be out of business. I just want everyone to know that this is propaganda for the "save the reef year" in hawaii and thats all. The true reason you are seeing less fish is because of more people and more pollution. This video represents me poorly. The public aquariums would not hire me or twenty other divers that applied for work.
This is a published product of the Hawaii Audubon Society, discussing the impacts of ornamental fish collecting for EXPORTATION out of Hawaii for the HOME AQUARIUM industry/trade. The info give here has no bearing on the public aquariums of Hawaii- who are often the most responsible & careful to use sustainable practices- & all of which support the idea of limiting exportation of our fish. In fact, two prominent public aquariums in Hawaii participated in the making of this video.
This video is full of false information. The 60% mortality figure is for fish from the Philippines and Indonesia - it isn't true for Hawaii. Hawaiian aquarium collectors are very responsible fishermen and our fishery is the most sustainable in the state.
I lose less than 1% of my fish, and am careful to leave the coral untouched. I'm proud to be a fish collector, and if I thought my actions were hurting the reef, I'd get another job.
Mahalos for the great content! This video is now playing on HawaiiPictures(.)com. Check the chat room on the bottom of the home page and feel free to embed the room on your blog or site.
Wish everyone who has an aquarium sees this before they buy another fish. Any other business that had a failure rate of 60% for their product would be out of business. Instead the collection business creates dying ghost reefs.
Do what you can to promote healthy reefs and leave the tropical fish in the oceans
I used to work in an aquatic shop. I used to go to my wholesaler every week and be stunned by the number of species on offer. I was always told that they were all net caught, no cyanide or dynamite was used, avoiding loss was top of the agenda. It's bull shit. I've witnessed boxes of livestock being opened and everything is dead, fish, inverts everything. The trade is awful, no one cares about the long term state of the oceans, it's all about profit from the top down. The trade is sick, end of.
unclejnr 2 years ago
Targeting prereproductive juveniles is a well known problem with the industry. For $50 a year, collectors take as much as they want from Hawaii's reefs with no limits on the species or numbers of fish taken. Targeted species populations have plummeted in many areas, in fact 2 butterflyfish species have crashed in areas of Kona where most of the collecting occurs. Collectors claim to have the best intentions for the resource, but continue to strip mine. The State allows and even supports it.
oceanfish1 3 years ago
While you raise some valid points (such as the value of aquaculture) the bias in this video undeniable.
Several factual inaccuracies are present and you have blatently failed to sight any of your resources. In particular, the reference to the collection of juvenile fish demonstrates a frank ignorance to the population dynamics of reef fish. The collection of juvenile specimins minimises population impact as it has relatively little impact on the reproductive potential of the population.
mdritchie 3 years ago
This video speaks to an ultra pessimistic version of the truth. It is a distortion of reality which uses mixed data sets, supposition and poorly thought out conclusions to pursue by a preconceived agenda of eliminating the wild marine aquarium industry. It will be a monumental effort to develop aquaculture techinques without the participation of dedicated hobbyists. Mariculture of corals made leaps and bounds based on hobbyist contribution to the science.
mauikin 3 years ago
FYI - 60% of the fish taken from the wild do not die... it is actually 100%!
Everyone dies.
The rub is that we do not all die in prematurely and in captivity!
BigWaveBabe 3 years ago
Cool concept but not true. I am a collector and disagree with your tactics. If more than 3 % died after collection we would be out of business. I just want everyone to know that this is propaganda for the "save the reef year" in hawaii and thats all. The true reason you are seeing less fish is because of more people and more pollution. This video represents me poorly. The public aquariums would not hire me or twenty other divers that applied for work.
mrhawaiifish 4 years ago
CLARIFICATION:
This is a published product of the Hawaii Audubon Society, discussing the impacts of ornamental fish collecting for EXPORTATION out of Hawaii for the HOME AQUARIUM industry/trade. The info give here has no bearing on the public aquariums of Hawaii- who are often the most responsible & careful to use sustainable practices- & all of which support the idea of limiting exportation of our fish. In fact, two prominent public aquariums in Hawaii participated in the making of this video.
UnderwaterPhotosMaui 4 years ago
This video is full of false information. The 60% mortality figure is for fish from the Philippines and Indonesia - it isn't true for Hawaii. Hawaiian aquarium collectors are very responsible fishermen and our fishery is the most sustainable in the state.
I lose less than 1% of my fish, and am careful to leave the coral untouched. I'm proud to be a fish collector, and if I thought my actions were hurting the reef, I'd get another job.
rgbmatt 3 years ago
Mahalos for the great content! This video is now playing on HawaiiPictures(.)com. Check the chat room on the bottom of the home page and feel free to embed the room on your blog or site.
HawaiiArt 4 years ago
Wish everyone who has an aquarium sees this before they buy another fish. Any other business that had a failure rate of 60% for their product would be out of business. Instead the collection business creates dying ghost reefs.
Do what you can to promote healthy reefs and leave the tropical fish in the oceans
tubefeet888 4 years ago