If I am allowed to barge in, I would say that the captive silver pool is, must be, very small, and most of the silvers we get, at least in europe ( and I would think in the US ) come from Asia ( ok, some from importers in Germany and elsehwre directly from South america ) but, as was said, the majority of them is grown in Asia, and shipped back to the west. ( Just as an example, one of my costumary fish providers phone me yesterday about his latest list from Singapore,a nd the only Aro's available were silvers?!?!
)
Silvers are mostly caught by indians and other riverine people, who catch the males and chop their heads off to get the babies. That is thair way of life, and nothing can be said against them. But having said this, I very strongly feel that we should avoid, to our utmost, the fascination ( that we all feel, let us face it, with wild caughts. Wild caughts remain, for all of us, the jewels in our crowns ) with wild caughts and we should concentrate our efforts ( all of us, the hundreds of us ) in trying to deepen our knowledge of these wonderfull animals and to try and discover how to give them the best conditions to breed. We all should have an obligation to try to strenghten whatever breeding silver Aro pool there is..
Let us all try...if not to breed them, at leastto get to know Arowanas as best as we can...they truly are, all breeds, magnificents pieces of nature and natural history.
just my 2 cents..

Silvers are mostly caught by indians and other riverine people, who catch the males and chop their heads off to get the babies. That is thair way of life, and nothing can be said against them. But having said this, I very strongly feel that we should avoid, to our utmost, the fascination ( that we all feel, let us face it, with wild caughts. Wild caughts remain, for all of us, the jewels in our crowns ) with wild caughts and we should concentrate our efforts ( all of us, the hundreds of us ) in trying to deepen our knowledge of these wonderfull animals and to try and discover how to give them the best conditions to breed. We all should have an obligation to try to strenghten whatever breeding silver Aro pool there is..
Let us all try...if not to breed them, at leastto get to know Arowanas as best as we can...they truly are, all breeds, magnificents pieces of nature and natural history.
just my 2 cents..