A lil something of some interst

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beblondie

In Loving Memory
Mar 31, 2005
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The killing of mouthbrooding Silver arowana to remove their offspring and export them for the global aquarium trade may be placing the species under threat according to a new study.

The Silver arowana, Osteoglossum bicirrhosum, is a paternal mouthbrooding osteoglossid fish that reaches a length of over 1m/39" and is one of South America's most popular food fish species.

It is also of commercial importance to the aquarium industry and in 2001 the export of one million juvenile Silver arowana contributed around $560,000 to the rural poor of Peru, according to official records. However, the actual number of arowana exported could be as much as 20% higher.

According to a new study by Marie-Annick Moreau and Oliver Coomes of McGill University, which has just been published in the journal Oryx, the export of Silver arowanas in Peru has been on the rise for several years and the killing of reproductive males could threaten the sustainability of the fishery.

Moreau and Coomes claim that the species' life-history characteristics, including the small number of offspring it produces, make it unsuited to the heavy exploitation it is facing from both the aquarium trade and the food fish industry.

"Two osteoglossid species with similar biological traits are already listed on CITES to protect wild populations from collection for the aquarium and food fish trades", the authors wrote.

"No similar international trade restrictions are in place for the Silver arowana, and little information is available on the status of wild populations in Peru or elsewhere in South America. Arapaima gigas is categorised as Data Deficient on the IUCN Redlist, but O. bicirrhosum has yet to be evaluated."


More research needed
The authors emphasise that determining whether the aquarium trade poses a threat to the species is challenging:

"Research to determine whether stocks are declining, as seems likely given the current levels of offtake, would need to be conducted over several years and in different fishing areas, and would need to determine whether exploitation for the aquarium trade is the primary cause of any decline or whether other factors (eg. direct fishing for food, bycatch capture by other fisheries and habitat degradation/destruction) also act singly or jointly to reduce fishing yields."

Moreau and Coombes suggest that guidance in the sustainable use of the Silver arowana fishery is needed, rather than an outright ban on the sale of the species, as there is an absence of supporting data on the conservation status of the species.

"To ban the trade outright would deny an important source of income to the rural poor, destabilise an export economy that is estimated to directly employ up to 14,000 people in Peru and that provides important foreign earnings to Amazonian countries, and would probably shift exploitation to other vulnerable Amazonian aquarium fish species, such as river stingrays."

For more details see the paper: Moreau MA and OT Coombes (2006) - Potential threat of the international aquarium fish trade to silver arawana Osteoglossum bicirrhosum in the Peruvian Amazon. Oryx, Vol. 40, No. 2.
 
I've heard stuff about this, but never seen anything showing signs of taking steps to prevent it. Nice find!
 
They could ban the exportation of wild silvers and hobbyists wouldnt be affected all that much. Majority of the silvers that we get here in N.america are commercially bred from asia anyway. Black Aros are another story though.

Great article btw and thanks for sharing. :thumbsup:
 
interesting article...what i don't understand is why it's necessary to kill the mouthbrooding male to begin with
 
Very interesting aricle Anne, thanks for sharing.
 
interesting article...what i don't understand is why it's necessary to kill the mouthbrooding male to begin with


Its probably the fastest , most effecient way of getting the juvenile silvers . I dont think the fishermen wants to be bothered with opening the jaws of a 2ft + silver aro to extract the babies.
 
i dont understand y do they kill the brooder? :confused:

They kill it cos they wanna eat it! ;)

Interesting article, but I disagree with it. The forest people that do this catch arowana for food. If it wasn't for the aquarium industry, those fries would have been discarded and lost, as the father was going to killed for food anyway.

Just my 2c..
 
you may be right, but sadly this issue has been around for quite a while. nowadays natives search for south american aros just for the purpose of extracting and selling juveniles, leaving the killed brooders behind. certainly a more financially rewarding job than just plain food fishing. yes the natives eat aros but the meat aint that good, so the marketability as food aint that high. so what happens is they kill more brooders for the aquarium trade than for food purposes.

and Redtailfool explained very well why they kill the poor father arowana. they dont really care about proper breeding and conservation, they just want the quick buck
 
Fanstastic, so sadly revealing. Thank you. So any grad students needing a phd project??? Duke University specializes in evolutionary biology and diversification and well as extintion. They are renound for the primalotgy center and avoiding the extinction of animals. Right now the main focis is Lemurs in Madasgascar. 3rd world countries killing to extinction for survival DO TO HUMAN OVERBREEDING :naughty:

Reference that earlier thread looking for TV programs-sounds like this one has a place for you to find your research and answers. The university websites allow you to access this info.

Time more another Monster Movement? I'd
trade my life in and move to the Amazon in a heartbeat if I had the chance to work on a aro project. Wow, the possibilities are endless, there's hope but first if must be brought to the attention of the right people.....cuvier passed in the 1800's and the aro research just seemed to have gone to #**^&& since.

This is the begining of extinction. Humans cause it, can we save it? Will we kill them off?
How long until the last old monster floats to the bottom of the Amazon on his side and slowly turns white. Too old and tired, the last of an entire species . A memory to us and a story about the beatiful ancient arowana to our grandchildren. And one hell of a Legacy.....:asianarow :mwave: :asianarow
 
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