A
Anonymous
Guest
Cyanide collecting of marine fish for food or the aquarium market is still practiced in many places in the low wage countries of the western Pacific where net, traps, hook and line, and aquaculture are increasing. It, nevertheless, difficult to assess whether a box of fish brought to a buyer anywhere was collected by net, trap, bleach, cyanide, quinaldine, or even puffer poison. The only way to be certain is to go out with that collector, and in many cases, that is not feasible or the buyer doesn't want to know. What are the consequences of chemical collecting? It is undeniable that bleach, cyanide and quinaldine are cost- effective at anaesthetising fish or chasing them out of holes. The downside of collecting fish in this manner are several. First, the dose is uncontrollable because concentrated drug is squirted from a plastic bottle to inside or outside a hole with very varied currents. Fish of different species and sizes have different susceptibilities, respond to different contact times, and many will die almost immediately. More important are the effects on invertebrates, which are in some cases more susceptible to than fish. Tubeworms can withdraw and, in the process, rapidly flush out, or otherwise avoid a noxious chemical, but coral polyps have no such defence. The effects of cyanide collecting on coral reefs have been documented to be devastating to the corals and other marine life.