Sailor_jon
New member
of course we impact the worlds reefs.....
of course we impact the worlds reefs.....
Of course we impact the workds reefs...We impact everything we do because as human animals, thats what we do. We dont blend, we adapt the environment to us, not the other way around. Its not a moral judgement its how we were built. As far as reefs, lets look at three things:
One is the freshwatertropical fish industry, they produce as an aquacultural product, probably 90% of everything in a LFS. Good move, the discoverd long ago, you cant keep collecting, the source runs out and its cheaper to aquaculture and you have better 'control' over the product. Hillsborough County, Florida, where I am from, has a huge aquculture industry dedicated to nothing but tropical fish, for distribution and sale in LFS.
Two - yes or course the hobby has impact, look at Hawiian reefs, where they have been stripped of hippo tangs and other 'popular' fish due to movie star fish, not to mention Thailand, Indonesia and other locations where they have little moral reasons to preserve. They are not educated in sustainability and therefore strip mine entire areas for fish for us hobbyists. Dont be an Ostrich and pretend its not happening. We contribute by purchasing from these LFS who patronize such distributors, if you dont know where the fish came from..ASK!
Third...All that being said, just last Sunday, I watched a school of about 100 Jacks decimate a school of about 10,000 threadfin minnows in about 5 minutes, the segulls ate the rest. The diffference is, it was converted to Jacks which are eaten by..... etc etc...all sustainable resources! More fish than hobbyists would put in a tanks around the world in a year!
YES we have an impact, but we can reduce the impact by aquaculturing and trading between us, and learning and exploring and passing on the knowledge. The Pew Oceans Research Study is correct, the biggest impact we have on our Oceans is overpopulation. The great salad days of constant taking from nature are rapidly coming to an end, we see that with global warming and what happens when we crap in our own sandbox.
Lets all be resposible and contribute to our own sustainability not selfish taking. We were given the ability to do this.
of course we impact the worlds reefs.....
Of course we impact the workds reefs...We impact everything we do because as human animals, thats what we do. We dont blend, we adapt the environment to us, not the other way around. Its not a moral judgement its how we were built. As far as reefs, lets look at three things:
One is the freshwatertropical fish industry, they produce as an aquacultural product, probably 90% of everything in a LFS. Good move, the discoverd long ago, you cant keep collecting, the source runs out and its cheaper to aquaculture and you have better 'control' over the product. Hillsborough County, Florida, where I am from, has a huge aquculture industry dedicated to nothing but tropical fish, for distribution and sale in LFS.
Two - yes or course the hobby has impact, look at Hawiian reefs, where they have been stripped of hippo tangs and other 'popular' fish due to movie star fish, not to mention Thailand, Indonesia and other locations where they have little moral reasons to preserve. They are not educated in sustainability and therefore strip mine entire areas for fish for us hobbyists. Dont be an Ostrich and pretend its not happening. We contribute by purchasing from these LFS who patronize such distributors, if you dont know where the fish came from..ASK!
Third...All that being said, just last Sunday, I watched a school of about 100 Jacks decimate a school of about 10,000 threadfin minnows in about 5 minutes, the segulls ate the rest. The diffference is, it was converted to Jacks which are eaten by..... etc etc...all sustainable resources! More fish than hobbyists would put in a tanks around the world in a year!
YES we have an impact, but we can reduce the impact by aquaculturing and trading between us, and learning and exploring and passing on the knowledge. The Pew Oceans Research Study is correct, the biggest impact we have on our Oceans is overpopulation. The great salad days of constant taking from nature are rapidly coming to an end, we see that with global warming and what happens when we crap in our own sandbox.
Lets all be resposible and contribute to our own sustainability not selfish taking. We were given the ability to do this.