fishguy194
New member
I was looking through some of the posts and have seen many different hybrids and aberrant animals that people go gaga over. However, with so much advancement coming up in the aquaculture community, aberrant animals are popping up all the time. If you look at the ocellaris clownfish as an example, there are plenty of varieties now being bred in large quantities, whereas, if these aberrants came from the wild they would probably be sold at an outstanding price.
I mention this because I have a theory and was wondering if anyone else agrees with me: are aberrant animals common but are "culled" in their natural environment. And as we start breeding more and more species, will we see that aberrant animals are not rare "genetically" but are rare because they are simply eaten before they settle onto the reef?
I have a prime example here:
http://risingtideconservation.blogspot.com/2012/03/market-size-semicircle-angelfish.html
It's the first time a Koran Angel has been raised to metamorphosis in captivity, but if you look at those animals, most of their stripes do not match any of their wild counterparts! Which then raises more questions like: why are wild Koran's selected to have that particular stripe pattern? What is the driving force behind it? The same can be applied to almost every species of tank bred clownfish. Most animals in a single spawn will be "misbarred" with the exception of a few.
Why do wild ocellaris clowns have 3 complete bars? Do 3 bars provide better camouflage than 1 or 2?
Final thought / question: Once more animals are cultured in captivity, will these 1 in a million wild aberrants become as common as going to petco and picking out which color betta matches the kitchen counter? I believe the answer will be yes. Personally, I am very excited to see the future of our hobby because I really REALLY want a chrysurus imperator hybrid! I just don't want to be paying the same price as a mercedes for one!
I mention this because I have a theory and was wondering if anyone else agrees with me: are aberrant animals common but are "culled" in their natural environment. And as we start breeding more and more species, will we see that aberrant animals are not rare "genetically" but are rare because they are simply eaten before they settle onto the reef?
I have a prime example here:
http://risingtideconservation.blogspot.com/2012/03/market-size-semicircle-angelfish.html
It's the first time a Koran Angel has been raised to metamorphosis in captivity, but if you look at those animals, most of their stripes do not match any of their wild counterparts! Which then raises more questions like: why are wild Koran's selected to have that particular stripe pattern? What is the driving force behind it? The same can be applied to almost every species of tank bred clownfish. Most animals in a single spawn will be "misbarred" with the exception of a few.
Why do wild ocellaris clowns have 3 complete bars? Do 3 bars provide better camouflage than 1 or 2?
Final thought / question: Once more animals are cultured in captivity, will these 1 in a million wild aberrants become as common as going to petco and picking out which color betta matches the kitchen counter? I believe the answer will be yes. Personally, I am very excited to see the future of our hobby because I really REALLY want a chrysurus imperator hybrid! I just don't want to be paying the same price as a mercedes for one!