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clarionreef

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08/14/2007 printer-friendly version


Enslaving the World's Reef Fish

Commentary by Sea Shepherd Advisory Board Member Robert Wintner

A Brief History of Some Efforts to Date (August, '07) to Stop the Grab-Ass, Free-For-All Extraction Now Decimating World Reefs.

Here's where we've been & where we might go:

The Main Hawaiian Islands now have "ghost" reefs off many leeward shores, with healthy coral but very few fish-not a single yellow tang can be found on most reefs, where they schooled by the hundreds 10 years ago-by the thousands 30-50 years ago. Water degradation & silting from development account for some decline in fish populations, but the biggest cause is massive extraction by aquarium collectors (& gill netters). Aquarium collectors take 8-10 million "ornamental" fish from Hawaii reefs annually with no regulation and no limit to their take.

For years the state's official number was ½ million fish taken per year, including 300,000 yellow tangs. Dan Polhemus, State Administrator of the Division of Aquatic Resources (DAR), sat down in early August with a key panel, including the biggest aquarium fish exporter in Hawaii, who provided accurate catch stats. The "official" take now reflects the grim reality.

Milolii is the last working fishing village in Hawaii-electricity by generator, water by catchments-way south on the Kona coast, and a steady target for collectors from Kailua Kona, some of whom say that they collect with care, but once they get to a reef, they collect all the fish, because "less scrupulous" collectors would only gather them tomorrow anyway. This is the grab-ass, free-for-all & crime against nature now prevailing in Hawaii. The Milolii community feels violated by aquarium collectors strip-mining reefs after generations of balanced management by Hawaiians. Milolii supports any campaign to rid the near shore of this mad extraction. Their voice is Hawaiian, with significant influence.

The Kona Coast (about 150 miles) does have an FRA (Fish Replenishment Area) system that has facilitated some recovery of more than half the 15 or so heavily collected species. New fads and appetites in Asia & the U.S. may pre-empt this marginal recovery. I.e. the Beijing government now promotes home aquaria to its growing class of rich people: wall-to-wall-to-wall aquaria for mature adult "ornamental" reef fish-brood stock. The trend values volume and custom made tanks of leaded crystal glass. Sumner Redstone, CEO of Viacom, told a PBS interviewer last year that he went out on one of those boats they have there in Hawaii where you can look at the fish, and by God his home aquarium wrapping 3 walls has "more fish than they got in all Hawaii." This old man out of touch with nature is more the rule than the exception and illustrates this pathetic trend. Consider Michael Dell's monster fish tank on the Big Island, along with support techs named Steve or Elaine who speak Hindi, next time you ponder a Dell computer.

Worse yet is the growing appetite in Asia for big yellow tangs-to EAT!

The FRA system on the Kona coast alternates no-collecting zones with plunder zones. Plunder zone populations are up as result of overflow from FRA zones. But FRA constraints apply only to aquarium collectors-bag netters can still catch the 40-year-old brood tangs for export to Asia, where ogres under bridges pay top dollar for this latest "delicacy." Waning supply spurs demand. Eating the last of a species appears to be a particular honor in Asia. A single consolation is that ciguatera toxin is present in most reef organisms & transmitted by ingestion up the food chain. Ciguatera doesn't hurt sea creatures but will disabuse humans of their reefy appetite with 2 years of itching & then death. Have a nice day. Ciguatera incidence in humans is up dramatically on all islands, especially Kauai. FYI, ulua (jack crevalle) is a popular food fish that is also an apex predator & primary carrier.

Of greater concern on the Kona coast is the continuing disappearance of 8 species of reef fish, collected to invisibility. Are they endangered? Who knows? Official status would take years and millions of dollars to establish. We who visit the reefs often see no more anthius, flame angel, bandit angel, dragon moray, Hawaiian turkeyfish, blue stripe butterfly or Tinker's butterfly. Quickly going is the teardrop butterfly.

Most hateful is that 3 of the 10 reef fish most demanded by aquarists are the ornate butterfly, Moorish idol and cleaner wrasse. A cleaner wrasse needs 35-40 fish to clean, in order to survive. They die in aquaria. Ornate butterfly and Moorish idol are coralvores who will starve to death in 30 days, who are sold & shipped out with a 15-day live guarantee. Meanwhile, a reef with no cleaner wrasse will soon suffer parasites and disease. Yet demand is on the rise.

Economically speaking, a yellow tang lives to 45 years on the reef with repeated revenue by amusing those tourists who like to stare at the colorful fish while sucking air through a plastic tube. The same yellow tang will die in a tank at 2 years max-if the tank is perfectly maintained, and if the tang or other fish came from Hawaii. All reef fish from Indonesia, the Philippines, Andaman Sea, South China Sea et al now have compromised liver function from residual cyanide used over the years in fish collection. Any fish coming from those waters will die in a few months to 2 years in captivity. Veteran collectors in those areas have yellow eyes, jaundiced from exposure to cyanide.

The economic disjunction is staggering. Aquarium collectors here generate $20 million. Water-based tourism generates a billion dollars annual, or 500 to 1. Worse yet, a yellow tang wholesales to the mainland for $3, where it retails at $45-60. Hawaii gets the chump change, which, historically, is for chumps. 1-2 more adult tangs will die en route for each surviving tang.

At the Hawaii Aquatics Conference in December, 2006, Dr. Ivor Williams delivered DAR's official line on FRA success, beginning with the "official" stats, that 500,000 "ornamental" fish are sold annual though "we can't be certain of accuracy on these numbers." He went on to discuss the 6 or 8 "species of concern," those species still MIA, though not officially extinct till Federal moolah can pay for scientific studies. He closed by saying "we don't really know where these species of concern are going or why, but we're happy to report that we still have trophic balance on our reefs." Trophic balance means distribution and balance of species.

But yellow tangs are herbivores, and Hawaii reefs are choking with limu, both native and invasive. It's tough to call bullshit on a good guy who is a good scientist, but the moment was of record, so I called: "Rather than saying that we can't be certain of accuracy on the stats, would we not be more precise in saying that we can be certain of inaccuracy on the stats?"

"Well, er, uh, yes! We could say that."

"We now have evidence that 8-10 million aquarium fish are shipping out of Hawaii every year, mostly herbivores. It doesn't take a rocket or marine scientist to get in the water & see how badly our reefs are decimated."

No comment.

"Which means that we do know where these species of concern went. They went away in Styrofoam coolers with little air stones inside."

This diatribe was not a victory but illustrates the difficult process of changing public perception-from what special interests want it to be, to the truth based in reality. Dr. Williams & I had a nice chat after, & he is now far more apprised of the reality we perceive.

NO LOCAL or State government currently regulates species export outside the CITES list or the Endangered Species act. All species are fair game for unlimited trade if they don't appear on those lists-exotic reptiles or primates from Indonesia or a casual container of parrots from South America. Besides Endangered Species & CITES, local, regional or state constraints on wildlife export are virtually non-existent around the world.

In recent years the collectors wiped out the hermit crab population around Oahu, taking & selling 300,000 hermits @ 11 cents! For gross revenue of $33,000 a species was eliminated. Reintroduction would cost about $40 million & a few decades of studies. Then they went for feather duster worms to meet aquarium demand. Feather dusters live in the rocks; catching them is easy, once you smash the rocks.

Meanwhile, the biggest "ornamental" fish exporter in Hawaii sees the writing on the wall-that his successful business will soon founder for lack of inventory. He now sends 3 boats regular to Christmas Island for flame angelfish-electric red with 4 black bars. None are left in Hawaii, though world demand for flame angels is 10,000 fish per day. Flame angels wholesale @ $40, though this exporter says his most valuable asset is his reputation for selling fish handled with care, from reefs never exposed to cyanide. He said would-be competitors in Honolulu saw his success and went to Christmas Island to bag thousands of fish that all died on the way home or in poorly managed garage tanks. All the dead fish were shipped out to aquarists, who were then told that the loss was theirs, who then had no recourse but to order new fish elsewhere.

The 25 exporters operating in Hawaii are invisible, buying and shipping from unmarked warehouses. The 8-10 million "ornamentals" taken from Hawaii are annual. Collectors began at 20', then went to 40' and then 60'. Now they dive to 80'-at night everywhere but Kona.

The challenge upon us is to expose the crime and the devastation. It has gone unreported for years and now threatens reefs worldwide. Aquarium hobbyists in the U.S. are mostly male, 30-50. We are told that most are indifferent to reef death or alternatives. They want wild-caught fish, not captive bred, knowing that the wild fish will only survive 6-24 months. The movie Finding Nemo spawned crushing demand for clownfish, the marine species most easily bred in captivity, yet captive-bred clownfish don't swim as excitedly as wild-caught. So pet shops now promote new shipments of wild-caught clownfish, swimming excitedly. The Indonesia government last year increased its aquarium research budget 5-fold in the captive breeding of fancy goldfish, the bright orange guys with the gin gut, bug eyes & 3 tails. Freshwater tanks allow a new dimension to hobbyists in the many beautiful plants that support other tank creatures too, like algae eaters and scavengers with no effect on reefs. Public exposure of the facts will be a vital component in deconstructing the aquarium collecting industry.

We must 1) stay on point, avoiding rhetoric or emotion & 2) keep a soft touch-no hostility. We want to convert home hobbyists, not get them pissed off in a name-calling exchange. We want to shame them gently. I think of the internet pedophiles lured into the kitchen where the MSNBC cameras are rolling so the world can see them-they hang their heads, knowing their appetite is so wicked. Aquarium keeping is similarly shameful, but the perpetrators must be treated with understanding and help toward rehabilitation.

The current tsunami of green reverence is tricky, with every money monger showing a pulse calling himself green-including the aquarium industrialists in their multi-billion dollar pursuit, stripping every reef in the world while calling for "appropriate" or "sustainable" techniques. The next big show is the Marine Aquarium Council National Association (MACNA) in Pittsburg, September 14-16, 2007, where presenters with credentials will make hobbyists feel good about what they're doing. Can you be there to express a sentiment of a different nature?

Let us know if you can help otherwise by sending your name, address, email & area of expertise or willingness to [email protected]

All ideas, insights, connections, commitments and comments are welcome. Thank you for jumping in. Please talk this up, especially when you see reef fish in tanks anywhere. I'm not okay. You're not okay. This is not okay.

Hail Atlantis!



Robert Wintner is the nom de plume (et la guerre) of Snorkel Bob, Himself. He is on the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Board of Advisors and also serves as Executive Director of The Snorkel Bob Foundation.








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clarionreef

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This was just sent to me by a collector friend in Hawaii.
It leaves one breathless doesn't it?
He effortlessly weaves in truths and falsehoods and does it with the confidence of a true believer.
I especially liked the reference to what MACNA stands for.

The next big show is the Marine Aquarium Council National Association (MACNA) in Pittsburg

Steve
.
 

swsaltwater

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Hmm, if the stats in there are true I would have to take the side of shutting collections there down for a few years, the populations should recover rather quickly if they stop collecting for awhile.
 
A

Anonymous

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cortez marine":10g3nlqk said:
This was just sent to me by a collector friend in Hawaii.
It leaves one breathless doesn't it?
He effortlessly weaves in truths and falsehoods and does it with the confidence of a true believer.
I especially liked the reference to what MACNA stands for.

The next big show is the Marine Aquarium Council National Association (MACNA) in Pittsburg

Steve
.

Good LORD you're not kidding about that! Christ.

By the way, I have heard that tang is very good eating. ;)

Just sayin'.
 

Mthompson

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What is a "discriminating snorkeler & diver''? This is the motto of snorkelbob's....must have something to do with fully-opinionated....

Anyway, this guy is a walking contradiction delimited by florid and whimsical articulation, most likely meant for deception and the delusive preponderance of truth. 8O

I would like to see the hard data on the '8-10 million individual fish' being exported out of Hawaii every year. Even if 1 fish dies for every 2 fish that live, how many fish can be sold to the 700,000 saltwater aquarium owners over the course of a few years?

***WARNING***
*MATH CONTENT*

8mil fish * 2/3 = 5.36mil fish from Hawaii annually
5.36mil fish / 700,000tanks = 7.65fish/tank from Hawaii ALONE

note- This DOES NOT take into account the rest of the world exporting wild caught marine ornamentals to the U.S. If the total global ornamental trade is ~24.5mil (14mil-34mil from http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/habitat/ead/internationaltrade.htm - see how that works?), the U.S. would be responsible for 12.25mil.

With this figure, the figure is presumed to be more like 11.725fish/tank annually...are you starting to see the gaps in the 'accurate' numbers? How many people do you know replace nearly 12 fish per tank, per year? I also call shenanigans on the touted 10,000 flame angels per day demand - that's 3.65mil per year - if true, every tank in the world would have two or three!

On a more serious note, I think that there are some real issues here that are in need of serious and honest discussion. We do rely on coral reefs for most of our fish livestock, with only 5% being cultured (http://www.nmfs.noaa.gov/habitat/ead/internationaltrade.htm - see how that works?). This type of banter, of back-and-forth high-ball low-ball, will never get at solving the REAL issues. A true, unbiased assessment needs to taken of the industry. However, I am not positive if there is any chance of this actually succeeding, as it would need to be comprised of a multilateral interdisciplinary group of individuals who have no benefit to gain, or at least can truly put the better good of all others above their own; but a guy can hope can't he?

The facts are that wild stocks are dwindling, along with coral reefs in general. There are many different variables that play into this dilemma, so blaming just us reefkeepers is ludicrous, but don't get me wrong - we do play a role (albeit realistically narrower than many believe). We do need to look for more sustainable practices, and I do not mean other ways to collect wild fish, pushing ropes is nonsensical! We should look towards culture as a viable alternative, not just write it completely off because of 'difficult larval care' or 'live feed production difficulties', among other cockamamie excuses. There are problems of course, but none that are so far beyond the scope of dedicated, inspired, resourceful, and inventive people (akin to so many in this industry and hobby), that they cannot be solved.

I hereby challenge this industry to stop the meaningless repartee, stop battling with would-be allies, stop kicking ourselves in the ass! This crisis can be solved with the greater good of all to be had.
 

clarionreef

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The glaring error on the Marine Aquarium Council National Assn thing shows a disposition to shoot from the hip, parrot gossip and and not check things out.
Its also suggests hes a lone wolf, has no one to bounce things off of, represents no one in particular and wants to stake out a niche .
I guess the whales of the world are all safe now 8O and new frontiers are in order.
Steve
 

Mthompson

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I guess it all doesn't matter anyway, since the oceans are going to be 20-30ft. deeper in a few years. Thus, eliminating many of the obligate-photosynthetic symbiont algae. Thereby, also eliminating the obligate symbiont corals.... :roll:
 

clarionreef

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I am not positive if there is any chance of this actually succeeding, as it would need to be comprised of a multilateral interdisciplinary group of individuals who have no benefit to gain, or at least can truly put the better good of all others above their own; but a guy can hope can't he?

Well put...but we do live in America where all good things become advertising slogans, manipulated for selling stuff.
The mythical general good for all was supposed to be the realm of the ECO NGO. This was because businesses seem to have a hard time thinking beyond their own immediate, financial interests.
The reform NGO was to infiltrate, cajole, influence and persuade the trade to become its better self. It was to make the trade adopt a more sustainable way to do things.
Instead what happened was that the NGOs sold out to the trade, rolled over for it and became mesmerized by its alleged riches .
They became what they beheld and the lack of achievement in reform despite years and cash spent as they wanted to speaks louder then any words.
The decade gone by saw more refrom money and effort put on the issue then all of our history and the results were miniscule compared to what they could have been.
The funding dream came true....but wheres the beef?
Im sure that its because there is a huge difference in being able to package a million dollar grant proposal on a problem....and being able to actually implement strategies and staff to solve the problem.
Shame on the funders for being as incomplete and ill advised as they who squandered the money.
Steve
 

naesco

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God Bless him.
Even if his statistics are half truths he has the courage to comment on what industry knows is the truth but is loath to admit it.

The reefs are in serious trouble and industry is doing nothing about it.

If nothing changes and Greenpeace or the Government gets involved you will rue the day reeform is not at the top of industry's agenda.
Wayne Ryan
 
A

Anonymous

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Ok, you comfort yourself with that thought. Ultimately, it doesn't really matter in my mind whether the fish was eaten or killed via death by ammonia. Although, if eaten, at least it was put to some use.
 

swsaltwater

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The misinfo on a 2 year life for a tang is concerning but you can't argure that reef tourism offers a lot more money then reef hobbyist to an island. If the fish go then so the scuba divers. I think acurate numbers are in order but articles like this will carry weight if the scuba industry turns on ours........Now lets talk to them about how much damage new divers do to coral :)
 

swsaltwater

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Mthompson":2be9c9hi said:
How many people do you know replace nearly 12 fish per tank, per year? .


Sadly a lot of em do, I had a few ex-customers that were notorious for killing off fish. Never got a proper setup and they all had the fluval nitrate death. It's up to LFS to stop selling to those with subpar setups, livestock gurantees are a good way to motivate it as well :).
 

RichardS

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The same yellow tang will die in a tank at 2 years max-if the tank is perfectly maintained, and if the tang or other fish came from Hawaii.

I better tell my yellow tang he was supposed to die 3 years ago.

All reef fish from Indonesia, the Philippines, Andaman Sea, South China Sea et al now have compromised liver function from residual cyanide used over the years in fish collection. Any fish coming from those waters will die in a few months to 2 years in captivity. Veteran collectors in those areas have yellow eyes, jaundiced from exposure to cyanide.

So does that mean that ALL of the reef fish in those areas will be extinct in those areas in two years or will their residual cyanide compromised livers continue to function normally as long as they aren't caught.
 

dizzy

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cortez marine":nx9zmcbz said:
Ornate butterfly and Moorish idol are coralvores who will starve to death in 30 days, who are sold & shipped out with a 15-day live guarantee.

Despite all the obvious lies and deceptions in the article at least Race got a plug for his 15-day guarantee. :roll: Welcome to the Misinformation Age.
 

Caterham

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Naesco,

Thanks so much for your contributions to this thread.

Unfortunately, with absolutely zero past or current involvement in the trade of marine ornamentals there are some folks here is this community that might take your comments somewhat lightly.

I respect your efforts and hope that you continue to stay involved. All good teams have people cheering for them on the sidelines, out of play.

Warmest regards
 
A

Anonymous

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naesco":2y98tv7h said:
Seamaiden
No reefer would ever dream of eating a tang.

Yeah! And farmer would ever dream of eating a cow.
 

PeterIMA

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I agree that there is a lot of inaccurate information posted by Sea Shepherd. The number of fish collected and shipped from Hawaii cannot be more than 500,000.

Even the Philippines generally does not export more than 5 million fish per year (usually 2-3 million when things were better than now).

Tissot and Hallacher have published their surveys off the Big Island of Hawaii that demonstrate that there is over-collecting of yellow tangs and markedly higher abundances in the Fish Replenishment Areas (FRAs).

I think there are some problems in Hawaii (what about the use of bleach?) but the aquarium trade is being made the scapegoat by Sea Shepherd and other interests like the sport fishermen and the sport diving groups.

Peter Rubec
 
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Anonymous

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Caterham":1w35nl89 said:
Naesco,

Thanks so much for your contributions to this thread.

Unfortunately, with absolutely zero past or current involvement in the trade of marine ornamentals there are some folks here is this community that might take your comments somewhat lightly.

I respect your efforts and hope that you continue to stay involved. All good teams have people cheering for them on the sidelines, out of play.

Warmest regards

I cannot help but wonder if you're referring to me. And if so, I would like to know on what you might base your inferences. If not.. carry on.
 

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