E_americanus;4303308; said:the problem is that demand really isn't that high for them...or more specifically, there aren't a lot of people demanding them. with 100 Cubans you would almost surely saturate the market. look at tropical gars...when we first brought them in they were $350 each for 6-8" specimens, now you have them going for cheaper at larger sizes.
the Cubans would go similarly...we had an order brought in several years ago and it was a small one so they went fast (at about $275 each for small guys, it may have been even a higher price, i don't recall exactly)...but then most people who bought them killed them because they didn't realize they are tougher to keep than the more common species.
king-el, congrats on getting a Cuban for your collection, although it's too bad how you had to go about doing it. if i were the person in charge of the research i'd be pissed if one specimen were missing as research like this (with so little being done on gars) depends greatly on having ALL the fish present and used to the fullest ability. this is part of the reason hobbyists get a bad reputation in fish research...they often believe their interests in "collections" supercedes the importance of quality research.--
--solomon
It was an act of desperation of wanting a cuban gar and I understand where you're coming from. Did all the hard part and not getting one will also piss me off as I've been wanting a cuban gar for a long time now. Don't wanna spend $200 for a 6" when an cheaper 11" is available. Did pay 40% of the total cost of bringing them here and for the university of taking all 99 and only payed 60% of the cost won't be fair for me. I should have at least 20 gars to obtain if it wasn't for research. I actually gave them donation.
