Look guys it is definatly getting much Harder to get wild fish Imported and as always venders are trying hard to get the perspective buyer what they want ..Exactly what they want !!!! If it was easy and cheap would we even want to buy the fish ????most likely not this discussion is a good thing for sure makes us sit back and be thankful for what we do have!!!!!
Thank you Hulon for your comments. I agree, getting wild peacock bass has never been easy. On the desired lists:
cichla intermedia- Venezuela, all peacock bass are banned from export, and we don't have a supply of Venezuelan fish, period
cichla thyrorus,vazzelori have not been exported on any commercial basis, and from Brazil all peacock bass are banned for aquarium trade. Only allowed to be catch and release, eaten, and collected by natives.
cichla melaniae, most of all are captive bred now from a few Michael Bottner, from wild fish he collected himself. There were a few smuggled out into asia earlier this year and shipped out. As with anything else
There are also a couple of reports of breeding in the US as well
Cichla orinocensis, and temensis, ones from Colombia are a staple, and orinos are bred now
Cichla kelberi found all over Brazil, in many places, are mostly all captive bred, as the "bahia" ones, and then some Araguai ones in Singapore. Then there were some sneaked out here and there in the past few years. Realize that cichla kelberi is one of the most wildly distributed species in Brazil. However due to the ban from export there will not be any regular commercial export of thousands at a time.
Cichla merianae-found in Brazil, matto grosso, which the area is nature preserve, very protected, not likely anyone will be collecting fish, and transferring 3 flights to get the fish out, alive, fish or fisherman. You can go and fish for them, about $4000 for 7 days of fishing, not including flight. Trust me, I've contemplated this...for a long time.
cichla piquiti-azul, are being bred in Brazil, which makes them legal for export, and rumors in Asia on a few occasions also. So this is becoming more available, hopefully
cichla sp. "brokopondo" these are only found in Surinam, and only one exporter, ships to 3 suppliers in North America only, with no regularity and no guarantee on the supplies. I just received a shipment of 150 pcs, all came in dead, not one alive. That could be one of the reasons of the high cost of the fish, as I'm still stuck with the 2500 shipping cost of the shipment, with nothing to sell.
cichla pinima, rarely exported from Brazil, again, snuck out of somewhere, no regularity, and expensive, how many do you know of in the US?
cichla occelaris, guayana, monoculus, etc. are not banned from export, and also many farm raised hybrids and what not. Also Florida peacocks are similar, some are caught there and sold as "wild".
cichla pleizona, I'm not familiar with...
cichla mysteries...