Keeping this fish is not trivial. I have only heard of a few instances of this fish surviving long term and I have never personally seen one live past one year in captivity. I think it was bad on LA's part to put this fish up for sale.
Keeping this fish is not trivial. I have only heard of a few instances of this fish surviving long term and I have never personally seen one live past one year in captivity. I think it was bad on LA's part to put this fish up for sale.
Agreed - they make no mention of it's requirements. A couple extra lines on suitable systems and tankmates wouldn't be that hard to add, although the real shame is that people are still encouraging the collection of these things.
This treads into far different territory though. You are suggesting that vendors have the ultimate repsonsibility in the hobbyist buying the "right" livestock? I couldnt disagree more. I could make the same argument for a HUGE number of fish. How many occelaris clowns perished after stupid "Finding Nemo" came out? Are they wrong for therefore selling occelaris clowns? Are they wrong for selling an angelfish that may or may not eat in my tank? Or aselling me a chromis that may or may not get eaten by my lionfish? etc etc etc.
I think your comment is misapplied. Its not that keeping this fish is a non-trivial matter, but BUYING fish is a non-trivial matter. If it is acclimated appropriately, and eats properly and soundly, why would it not thrive? Again, I would suggest that the vast majority, if not ALL of the pinnatus you saw perish probably were housed, handled, and prepared improperly. And this is the reason they couldnt thrive.
Again, I will respectfully disagree completely about the vendors "responsibility" in making the aquarist informed. Forums, such as RC, go to extreme lengths to inform aquarists of potential fish issues.
missaplied? Umm as I have said I have yet to see one of these live past one year in captivity and I don't think that LA is really able to do that much better than many of the public aquariums I have seen fail with this species. The care of this species is not simply a matter of getting it to feed and have it keep feeding as I have seen numerous specimens succumb that were feeding. For the statistically insignificant fraction of a percent of these fish that do make it the owners should realize their specimen is an outlier.
You seem to imply that there is nothing wrong with a seller making a buck on the whims and or ignorance of a customer and I beg to differ. It is wrong to take advantage of a customer selling them something they aren't suited to keep just as it is wrong for the customer to buy something without doing research on the subject. These are live animals we are talking about and we all have a responsibility to ensure that we can provide the best care possible for our animals.
missaplied? Umm as I have said I have yet to see one of these live past one year in captivity and I don't think that LA is really able to do that much better than many of the public aquariums I have seen fail with this species. The care of this species is not simply a matter of getting it to feed and have it keep feeding as I have seen numerous specimens succumb that were feeding. For the statistically insignificant fraction of a percent of these fish that do make it the owners should realize their specimen is an outlier.
You seem to imply that there is nothing wrong with a seller making a buck on the whims and or ignorance of a customer and I beg to differ. It is wrong to take advantage of a customer selling them something they aren't suited to keep just as it is wrong for the customer to buy something without doing research on the subject. These are live animals we are talking about and we all have a responsibility to ensure that we can provide the best care possible for our animals.
So I take it you are not much for industry self regulation or "best practices."
Agreed - it is not their responsibility, it is their choice. It doesn't happen at most places, but if a hobbyist were to ask about that fish at one of the better fish stores the sales person would probably clue them in to its requirements. It still sucks they bought a fish that, to my knowledge, no private aquarist has thriving (or living for more than 6 mos) in a home system. But if you are going to purchase for resale (and thus support wholesalers ordering of, and the collectors collecting of) this fish than at least your are giving this fish a better shot at living with some helpful advice as to it's requirements.
Again, I don't expect most places to refrain from ordering high failure fish or provide even rudimentary advice on species care, but there are places that do and I commend them. To me everyone who does not do this is a sub par establishment (obviously there are many of them). I realize everyone save the end customer is in this for the money but there are a growing number of places that get by just fine without turning a quick buck on interesting/attractive fish with a high mortality rate.
Its great that people are pushing the limits of hard to keep species, but the associated mortality is pretty depressing. And warehousing these hard to keep species for a month and claiming them to be fit, eating and ready to go is kind of giving people the wrong idea - yea it made it a month, but a lot of fish can make it that far and longer and still expire due to improper care.
Respectfully, I think it is time for hobbyists to push for (or vote for...with their wallets) better livestock collection and care practices. It sucks we are taking so much from the ocean for a hobby, and it really sucks that so much of that dies. But if we can prevent collection of high mortality fish, or at least educate people on these specimens that are collected - that is meaningful improvement right there. RC, as you point out, is a great place to make people aware of these issues as well as livestock care.