Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-29T01:04:58.875Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Conservation and the Tropical Marine Aquarium Trade

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2009

H. R. Lubbock
Affiliation:
The Zoological Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, England.
N. V. C. Polunin
Affiliation:
The Zoological Laboratory, University of Cambridge, Downing Street, Cambridge, England.

Extract

Although mainly developed in the last ten years, the international trade in tropical marine aquarium fishes has now reached remarkable proportions; in the U. S. A. the annual sales of aquaria, aquarium supplies, and aquarium fishes, probably approach US$ 600 millions, while estimates of the numbers of marine aquarium fishes exported each year from the Philippines alone range from about 3 to over 30 millions, valued at approximately US$ 1.25 million to over 6 millions. The exporting areas include the Philippines, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Thailand, Singapore, Indonesia, Australia, Sri Lanka, Ethiopia, Saudi Arabia, Kenya, Mauritius, the U.S.A. (Hawaii and Florida), and several Caribbean islands. The main importing countries are the U.S.A., Hong Kong, West Germany, Japan, U.K., Italy, Belgium, Canada, Australia, France, Holland, and Switzerland.

Species extermination through this trade alone is scarcely conceivable, but local extinctions may occur, and indirect effects of collection of these fishes include accompanying destruction of the coral-reef habitat, changes in natural ecosystems, and the possibility of successful introduction of exotic species into areas where they did not occur previously (notably, Indo-Pacific species into the Caribbean). Clearly the trade will continue; but the current exploitation is inefficient, and controls must be applied both towards rational utilization of the resource and, as the most accessible and richest reefs are the most heavily exploited, towards a reduction of conflict between different uses of the resource.

Type
Main Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation for Environmental Conservation 1975

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Björklund, M. I. (1974). Achievements in marine conservation, 1. Marine parks. Environmental Conservation, 1(3), pp. 205–23, map.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Briggs, J. C. (1974). Marine Zoogeography. McGraw-Hill, New York, N.Y.: x + 475 pp., illustr.Google Scholar
Courtenay, W. R. & Miley, W. W. II, (1975). Range expansion and environmental impress of the introduced Walking Catfish in the United States. Environmental Conservation, 2(2), pp. 145–8, illustr.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dart, J. K. G. (1972). Echinoids, algal lawn, and coral recolonization. Nature (London), 239, pp. 50–1.Google Scholar
IUCN (1973). Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora. IUCN Bull. (Special Suppl.), 4(3), 12 pp.Google Scholar
Lachner, E. A., Robins, C. R. & Courtenay, W. R. (1970). Exotic fishes and other aquatic organisms introduced into North America. Smithsonian Contrib. Zool., 59, 29 pp.Google Scholar
Ormond, R. F. G., Campbell, A. C., Head, S. M., Moore, R. J., Rainbow, P. R. & Saunders, A. P. (1973). Formation and breakdown of aggregations of the Crown-of-thorns Starfish, Acanthaster planci (L.). Nature (London), 246, pp. 167–9.Google Scholar
Ramsay, J. S. (in press). Aquarium fishes imported by the United States in October, 1971. Trans. Amer. Fish. Soc.Google Scholar
Roads, C. H. & Ormond, R. F. G. (Eds) (1971). New Studies on the Coral Predating Starfish Acanthaster planci. Report of the Third Cambridge Red Sea Expedition, 1970, Cambridge, England: 124 pp.Google Scholar
Torchio, M. (1968). Sulla eventuale presenza in acque mediterranee di individui dei generi Cephalopholis Bl. Schn. e Chaetodon L. Natura, Milano, 59, pp. 210–2.Google Scholar
Vine, P. J. (1974). Effects of algal grazing and aggressive behaviour of the fishes Pomacentrus lividus and Acanthurus sohal on coral-reef ecology. Marine Biology, 24, pp. 131–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar