The way I see it, parents are the ones that make the aquarium purchases for their kids starting out in aquarium keeping, and the parents probably have very little experience/knowledge in this area.
For the most part, they rely on manufacturers' claims of success with their particular setup.
As parents are the ones paying for the setups, I see a problem that the products purchased don't live up to the positive results implied.
How can we persuade manufacturers to take a more scientific approach (via marketing) to the long term success of aquarium keeping?
I've watched lots of families with kids ceremoniously bury their pet fish, and sell the aquarium setup at the next available garage sale. Usually the problem was overfeeding and no one had any understanding of the consequences.
In looking through many aquarium magazines, it seems to me that manufacturers are selling fantasy, not science. I never see any adds for microscopes or magnifying glasses, or other things that help somebody really see what is in their aquarium and what a particular life form needs to survive.
Maybe this belongs in the editorial section.
Mitch
For the most part, they rely on manufacturers' claims of success with their particular setup.
As parents are the ones paying for the setups, I see a problem that the products purchased don't live up to the positive results implied.
How can we persuade manufacturers to take a more scientific approach (via marketing) to the long term success of aquarium keeping?
I've watched lots of families with kids ceremoniously bury their pet fish, and sell the aquarium setup at the next available garage sale. Usually the problem was overfeeding and no one had any understanding of the consequences.
In looking through many aquarium magazines, it seems to me that manufacturers are selling fantasy, not science. I never see any adds for microscopes or magnifying glasses, or other things that help somebody really see what is in their aquarium and what a particular life form needs to survive.
Maybe this belongs in the editorial section.
Mitch