David,
You are indeed so very polite.
I to would like to borrow your disclaimer if I may;
Please do not take anything that I say as negative or even challenging, I am just throwing out some ideas and observations that I have as food for thought.
Bellwood bats;
I was intrigued by Bellwoods notions....I have no doubt it is true but what significant population of pinnatus are we talking about? I have seen schools of 30 giant two footers but they are few and far between. I wish him to be correct because that would mean that they are doing pretty well at least somewhere. The Barrier Reef no doubt.... where the tropical fish trade is an insignificant extractor of biomess from the reef and no one eats pinatus!.
Food fishes % vs. aquarium fishes...pretty much no contest. It should be obvious that the aquarium trade takes much, much smaller amounts of non breeder sized fishes in most of the herbivore genera, especially the parrots.
I just spent the day in a village that brought in more stringers of tangs, parrots and rabbits then you could shake a stick at and they do it every single day 'cept Sunday [ the day of
atonement?]
I am quite sure that there is little interest to truly understand what tonnage of reef fishes is removed routinely by village fishers juxtaposed to aquarium fishers in any matchup.
The results, the comparison would be so vast as to seem insignificant! [which is by the way, why the Australian governnment has granted such huge quotas to their fish collectors. Even they were surprised by their own calculations ]
Villagers in every fishing vilage need to eat every day...and they do! They spear or gillnet every shallow water edible herbivorous fish above 6 inches and do so relentlessly!
Tropical fish collector villages are numerically tiny in comparison...many entire countries have zero tropical fish trade and their problems are often identical to the rest.[ Indo and P.I. notwithstanding]
Tokenism and the creation of alarm
Remember the song..." if ya cant be with the one ya love...love the one you're with?"
Kinda like the search for issues to be concerned about.
If ya can't be with the ones that count, be with the ones that dont....and just create a greater buzz about them.
In any search for alarms to generate interest...we have seen;
1. Responses to alarming realities to actually help the condition of coral reefs.
2. Searches for alarm to satisfy some personal need.
3. Searches for alarms to generate funding....
Clearly by now at RDO-U....[.ie. RDO University] we have learned that looking for a cause to generate funding for is the biggest and most fashionable reason to
care about reefs these days.
In James Cook University in fact, an alarm went out by one researcher to save the Great Barrier reefs because if we don't a species of coral feeding butterflies ie. C. trifascialis, [ the chevron butterfly ] would be in trouble.
[ heedless of the inconvenient fact that no one in Australia takes them as they are "coral feeding worthless" ] The researcher who knew nothing of the aquarium trade simply assumed that the trade took them as there was no other possible, pin-pointable suspect and the aquarium trade always gets picked for the line-up anyway]
Hoping to find a blame that we actually have something to do with and the ability to affect is difficult I know....especially creating alarm from the West on issues in the rest of the world far away.
Many of us in the trade actually know what the worst thing we do is...and the reason we put up with outsiders nominating and playing with the issues is that they seem to always get it wrong.
If they actually listened to us, there would be more hell to pay.
Whistle blowing from within garners few allies in the trade and fewer outside...as the real, core issues are often too complicated, integrated with inconvenient cultural/political realities and are just not simple to solve from some convenient, comfortable on-line position.
NOTHING WE EVER DO IN HIS TRADE even approaches the damage we finance, subidize, enable, cause, create and pay for in the acceptance and tolerance of coral killing collecting methodologies.
Habit is the key and always has been.
Ruining, breaking, poisoning habitat deletes the next generations...or starts em down the slippery slope.
Habitat is critical, habitat is key, habitat is in fact the very environment itself which is quickly forgetten in the off track seach for the more charasmatic and limited "side issue-lets".
PS. IMHO
Steve