Again, Cortez (Steve), you hit the bullseye. It's not just professional environmentalists that are full of crap. Academics have learned to step very lightly around areas that might affect grant funding, and anything controversial that might affect promotions and (gasp!) tenure.
Just about every scientist in academia whose field directly or indirectly touches upon natural systems and the environment knows what the fundamental causes are for the mass extinctions we are experiencing, and for the dying oceans. They also know they can't say anything that would anger the money sources and the government, so they discuss meaningless non-solutions, illusions, manipulated data, like the declining populations of a list of selected nations, and things that are, at best, only very temporary band-aids.
They criticize only safe targets, like the aquarium trade, while the forests of Asia and South America are leveled and the world's reefs hover on the brink. It's all about money. That's how we got to this point. I remember the University of Florida (and its faculty) maintaining absolute silence while developers, paper mills, and phosphate operations drag lined and raped the state and ruined irretrievably most of the once magnificent underwater world, but holding press conferences about sport fishing game limits and tagging programs.
As far as estimating the longivity of captive fishes is concerned, it's a non-issue, an excercize in idle curiosity. I've kept some marine fishes for as long as 14 years. A friend had a Rock Beauty for almost 20 years. So what. Is it possible for anyone with even half a brain to think of themselves as saviors of individual fish they 'rescue' from a shorter life in nature? Buy that man a Nemo doll.
Just about every scientist in academia whose field directly or indirectly touches upon natural systems and the environment knows what the fundamental causes are for the mass extinctions we are experiencing, and for the dying oceans. They also know they can't say anything that would anger the money sources and the government, so they discuss meaningless non-solutions, illusions, manipulated data, like the declining populations of a list of selected nations, and things that are, at best, only very temporary band-aids.
They criticize only safe targets, like the aquarium trade, while the forests of Asia and South America are leveled and the world's reefs hover on the brink. It's all about money. That's how we got to this point. I remember the University of Florida (and its faculty) maintaining absolute silence while developers, paper mills, and phosphate operations drag lined and raped the state and ruined irretrievably most of the once magnificent underwater world, but holding press conferences about sport fishing game limits and tagging programs.
As far as estimating the longivity of captive fishes is concerned, it's a non-issue, an excercize in idle curiosity. I've kept some marine fishes for as long as 14 years. A friend had a Rock Beauty for almost 20 years. So what. Is it possible for anyone with even half a brain to think of themselves as saviors of individual fish they 'rescue' from a shorter life in nature? Buy that man a Nemo doll.
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