hey guys, what's your take? 
1) long term average price for a 5" pdr will fall from today's pricing.
- controlled and sustained brazilian exports.
- increasing captive breeding production.
- increased hybridisation of pdr bloodline in captivity will improve production yields and bring down prices. i.e. if a $1k pdr sp looks better than a $10k black diamond, which would you buy rite?
2) long term average price for a 5" pdr will stay more or less at today's prices.
- sporadic and unpredictable brazilian export pipeline.
- low production yields in captive breeding.
- unstable supply pipe line from captive breeders (perhaps a sizable portion of breeders are hobbyists and are therefore incidental breeders, meaning they come and go).
3) long term average price for a 5" pdr will go up from today's prices.
- ultimately, pdrs will become a CITES species, forever halting brazilian exports.
- lack of focused pdr breeding in captivity (unlike large scale commercialised farming of arowana) will mean that the captive pdr population would be unable to sustain itself.
Or maybe there will be a tiering of prices? i.e. very normal or not very nice pdr specimens will fetch lower pricing, and those exceptional looking specimens will have their prices bidded through the roof? I acknowledge price tiering occurs even today, but perhaps this will become even more pronounced going forward?
Looking forward to hearing your thoughts.
1) long term average price for a 5" pdr will fall from today's pricing.
- controlled and sustained brazilian exports.
- increasing captive breeding production.
- increased hybridisation of pdr bloodline in captivity will improve production yields and bring down prices. i.e. if a $1k pdr sp looks better than a $10k black diamond, which would you buy rite?
2) long term average price for a 5" pdr will stay more or less at today's prices.
- sporadic and unpredictable brazilian export pipeline.
- low production yields in captive breeding.
- unstable supply pipe line from captive breeders (perhaps a sizable portion of breeders are hobbyists and are therefore incidental breeders, meaning they come and go).
3) long term average price for a 5" pdr will go up from today's prices.
- ultimately, pdrs will become a CITES species, forever halting brazilian exports.
- lack of focused pdr breeding in captivity (unlike large scale commercialised farming of arowana) will mean that the captive pdr population would be unable to sustain itself.
Or maybe there will be a tiering of prices? i.e. very normal or not very nice pdr specimens will fetch lower pricing, and those exceptional looking specimens will have their prices bidded through the roof? I acknowledge price tiering occurs even today, but perhaps this will become even more pronounced going forward?
Looking forward to hearing your thoughts.
