Aquarium Fish, Hold the Cyanide 
By Stephenie Livingston ID Source: hakaimagazine 8/13/2020

Small like its name, the rural village of Les sits between rugged volcanic mountains and the sea on the northern coast of Bali, Indonesia. Winding two-lane roads flanked by modest housing and open-air markets are busy with motorbikes and rusty pickup trucks. But the ocean is calm. Slipping a worn dive mask over his eyes, Made Partiana freedives beneath the surface with fishing nets in hand. Les fishers like Partiana stay busy. Their village is one of the island’s top suppliers for a multimillion-dollar industry: the saltwater aquarium fish trade.
 

Before picking up nets 20 years ago, Partiana and other fishers in Les caught aquarium fish with the same chemical that movie spies put in suicide capsules: cyanide. Fishers mix it with a solution in a spray bottle and use it to blanket the reef in poison. The neurotoxin stuns fish, rendering them a lethargic, easy catch for several minutes. It’s just long enough to collect shy and highly sought-after fish like the blue tang, the inspiration behind Finding Nemo’s Dory.

The easy harvesting that cyanide provides comes at a deadly price. As much as 90 percent of fish caught with cyanide die before they reach a retailer. And the poison can severely damage coral reefs by destroying coral polyps and other organisms essential to reef health. When fishers are properly trained to use nets correctly so that they do not break or dislodge coral, net catching is demonstrably less harmful to the reef and its inhabitants, says Shannon Switzer Swanson, a marine social ecologist and PhD candidate at Stanford University in California, who works with fishing communities in Southeast Asia and the Pacific Islands.

 
Continue...

News Id SourceStampcountry
3801Great Barrier Reef potato cod at risk from own friendlinessbrisbane times2014-12-17US
3802One of world's most invasive fish detected in New South Wales for first timeABC Rural2014-12-17UK
3803US Navy is developing a robot fish called Silent Nemotelegraph2014-12-12UK
3804The heat is on for the 'living fossil'China Daily2014-12-09CN
3805A Fishing Lure So Effective, It Catches Criticismnytimes2014-12-02US
3806Tongue-eating parasite discovered in Morrisons mealmetro2014-11-23UK
3807S.F. creating an ‘amnesty pond’ for unwanted goldfishsfgate2014-11-25US
3808Scientists Investigate Lake Ontario When Submarine Spots Mysterious Objectdomesticatedcompanion2021-05-04CA
3809Canada adds warm-water fish to list of species monitored on East CoastCBC News2021-06-08CA
3810Ireland furious as Norway makes huge seizure of fish quota - 'Not acceptable!'express2021-05-28UK
3811Manned missions to Mars have taken a step closer thanks to hibernating zebrafisheuronews2021-06-08US
3812Black Seadevil caught on camera at depth of 1,900 feetusatoday2014-11-22US
3813Local boys catch their own 'River Monster'news4jax2014-11-19US
3814P.E.I. farmer fined for pesticide runoff that killed thousands of fishctv news2014-11-19CA
3815Sport and commercial fishermen battle over monster catfishindystar2014-11-02US
3816Atlantic Bluefin Tuna quotas see first increase in 24 yearsCBC News2014-11-18CA
3817The sockeye salmon's incredible, vital journeymacleans2014-11-16CA
3818Michigan State scientists: don't forget about freshwater fish!upi2014-11-10US
3819The U.S. Is Spending $4.5-Million To Save The Rarest Fish On Earthgizmodo2014-10-31US
3820Куда "плюнет" Босфорrg2021-06-10RU
3821Company is recycling old Alaska fishing gear into line of rugged clothingadn2021-05-26US
3822Banned pesticide blamed for killing bees may be approved for fish farmstheguardian2021-05-27UK
3823Discarded fish scales and frog skin used to make bone repair materialnewatlas2021-05-28SG
3824State's largest pike poisoning project underway in Soldotnaalaska journal2014-10-22US
3825Fishing or Fish Farming: Which Is More Responsible?treehugger2017-06-05NL

215 216 217 152 of [218 - pages.]