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#1 |
Moved On
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 161
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A Few Thoughts on P.Eichler's List
I want to say that the purpose of this post is not to ruffle any feathers,but of course it will,so.....While I appreciate the thought and effort that goes into a project of this nature,I must say that at its most fundamental level it is counterproductive to our hobby.
I contend that if the time and effort spent compiling a list of all the things we shouldn't keep were spent studying how to keep just one of these creatures properly that the long term interests of the marine hobby would be better served.Lists like this create the inevitable outcry for banning the keeping of the animals in question.If we don't try to keep them we will never learn how to! As an example take the freshwater Angelfish,Pteropyllum Scalare.When these fish were first brought into the hobby they were considered extremely difficult to keep and impossible to breed.As anyone who has kept freshwater fish in the last 30 years or so can tell you this is far from the case.Due to increases in knowledge,technology and the adaptation of these fish to captive conditions they are now dirt easy to keep and breed.Discus are heading in the same direction.At its heart the idea that since they are difficult to keep they shouldn't be kept smacks of the Flat Earth Theory.It can only lead to a situation where we will NEVER learn to keep them.Now I 'm not saying someone should start keeping Whale Sharks to learn their requirements,but many of the species on the list to be avoided have the potential to be great aquarium fish under the right conditions.As an example take the genus Platax.A little insight into their natural history sheds light on what they need to survive in captivity.as juveniles they are not found in the ocean but in mangrove swamps.Their unique shapes and colors mimic floating mangrove leaves.And guess what they eat alot of?Mangrove fruits.Try feeding juvies small pieces of ripe banana and grapes and see how they eat!Adults are easy to keep,but extremely large and need suitable housing.I could go on but this is getting too long!We need to think long term about our hobby and not give in to knee-jerk raections to our present lack of understanding.Many things are currently unknown,but nothing is unknowable.Unless we stop trying to learn. P.S. Any members from the U.K. can tell you that Betta splendens is illegal there because of the outcry from animal right nuts over the fact that people sometimes keep them in small jars.This stuff can and does happen! |
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#2 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Stavanger, Norway
Posts: 1,271
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B splendens is not illegal in the UK. Can you show me where they ARE stated to be illegal?
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#3 |
Moved On
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 161
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A friend works for Aquarium Pharmaceutical and travels to Europe extensively.The cannot be sold in LFS'.It is similar to the laws about small turtles in the U.S. I guess.It is illegal to SELL them,but not illegal to HAVE them.
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#4 |
Moved On
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 161
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OK apparently he was mistaken as am I about bettas,but the point stands
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#5 |
Moderator Emeritus
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Location: Wyoming
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Why have you not posted this on his thread?
IMO it's a list that might make people think twice about some of the fish. So I don't think it's counterproductive at all. Don't worry there'll always be people that know they can have these fish no matter what is posted about them.
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Debi ~60 Cube~ Why? Because I said so of course. -Sent via Tapatalk Smoke Signals- |
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#6 |
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Surrey, Canada
Posts: 1,926
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I differ from you.
I believe *most* hobbyists are just not in to all the nitty gritty efforts of experimenting with difficult to care for species... Most aquarists would say: Wow nice fish, lets buy it. Put it in their tank believing they will somehow have some luck that other specialist aquarists do not possess... But alas! After a couple weeks/months the fish dies. I think the rationale is that most aquarists (i.e. the average hobbyist) should stay away from difficult to keep animals as the chances they will die are very high. It does NOT mean skilled/dedicated people should not perform research. But it asks for a different kind of person than the average hobbyist. It requires someone willing to dedicate a considerable amount of time, effort and money in experimentation. Requiring dedicated setups to eliminate cross contamination etc. Because of this I firmly believe anyone not willing to spend that much effort should stay away from them UNTIL the dedicated guys find a verifiable solution. My R2 (worth as much as USD 0.02 ![]() |
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#7 |
Moved On
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 161
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Peter strikes me as an intelligent capable aquarist.He has spent 10 yrs off and on compiling his list.What if this intelligent capable aquarist spent 10 yrs developing a food source that could keep obligate coral feeders healthy?Wouldn't we as hobbyistists all be better off?And wouldn't all the obligate coral feeders that will be brought into the trade be better off as well?It is just a question of using our intellectual resources in a manner which will provide the maximum benefit to ourselves and the creatures we keep.I do not mean to offend anyone,but if I do,I do so in the quest to expand our knowledge.
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#8 |
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Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Schenectady, NY
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Hankthetank, I could not disagree with you more than words can describe. Most of my reasons were already well explained by Mr31415.
Most importantly were are concerned about the welfare of the endangered coral reefs. In another words Peter's list concerns conservation of the hobbyist resources as well as the conservation of wildlife. You really need to take a closer look at the big picture: The amount of wildlife which is lost enroute to our tank. Then the amount of wildlife which dies within days and weeks at final destination. I truly believe if you can see the "big picture" you'd change your mind quickly.
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Peter Landy Schenectady, NY Recent Returnee to the Marines! 12gl Aquapod New "custom euro" 90 gallon under construction! |
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#9 | |
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Join Date: Nov 2004
Location: Perry, OK
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Travis Stevens Current Tank Info: Restarting 28g Bowfront |
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#10 |
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Gainesville, FL
Posts: 2,346
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I think the point of the list is as a primer for people getting into this hobby.
In fact, I think it should be required reading and handed out at all fish stores. If more people, new to this hobby, appreciated the difficulty in taking care of certain species, then we wouldnt see newbies with 10g tanks throwing in mandarins, and then wondering why they died. |
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#11 | |
Moderator Emeritus
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Debi ~60 Cube~ Why? Because I said so of course. -Sent via Tapatalk Smoke Signals- |
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#12 |
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Va Beach, VA
Posts: 1,408
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I think Hank's argument is intelligent and well put and he makes a valid point. I got into salt water in 1986 and what I have now, what nearly all of us have now, was unthinkable for the home aquarist at the time. Many of the people we ask advice of are capable of giving us the answers because they learned by experience.
If the prices charged for fish and corals was reflective of the care they required it might help. King Kong brings up Mandarins; that's a good example of a very inexpensive life form that catches the eye of a hobbyist for it's coloration and goes home because it's so reasonably priced. The LFS will rarely avoid the sale by emphasizing the feeding requirements of said critter. Plenty of people will think it is expendable simply because of the $15 price tag. The Moorish Idol is another example. I can easily foresee a day when we can commonly keep the Idol, but it won't happen unless we try. I am not at all happy about my role in such matters, I mourn the loss of the smallest and most insignificant life forms (except roaches) but it is unlikely that we are going to experience success without also experiencing failure. |
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#13 |
RC Mod
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Just thinking here, but maybe it wouldn't be a bad notion to license certain pet dealers: Petco should stick to freshwater and birds, period, unless it changes out its tiny tanks for big tanks and stops overstocking them: 20 yellow tangs in a 20g---no wonder people get skewed ideas about what they can keep in a tank. This other guy, Sam, here, can be a licensed reef shop: he's got the big tanks and runs them properly, he'll sell equipment that will keep hobbyists in business, and without Petco to compete with, he can make a decent profit.
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Sk8r Salinity 1.024-6; alkalinity 8.3-9.3 on KH scale; calcium 420; magnesium 1300, temp 78-80, nitrate .2. Ammonia 0. No filters: lps tank. Alk and cal won't rise if mg is low. Current Tank Info: 105g AquaVim wedge, yellow tang, sailfin blenny,royal gramma, ocellaris clown pair, yellow watchman, 100 microceriths, 25 tiny hermits, a 4" conch, 1" nassarius, recovering from 2 year hiatus with daily water change of 10%. |
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#14 | |
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Peter Landy Schenectady, NY Recent Returnee to the Marines! 12gl Aquapod New "custom euro" 90 gallon under construction! |
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#15 | |
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Va Beach, VA
Posts: 1,408
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Did you read my post? I don't think I even made the remotest implication that we can keep them with ease at this point in time. I was speaking of the future and comparing it to how far we have come so far. |
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#16 | |
Moved On
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 1,550
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They one of the oldest life forms still alive and well after millions and millions of years of extreme climate and environment changes. i think they have outlived almost anything else in this world and for that they should be celebrated. i feed the roaches in my friend's apt and they reward me with unprecedented entertainment. i bow in their glory. |
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#17 | |
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Va Beach, VA
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#18 | |
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Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: South Florida
Posts: 1,936
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Ha ha...key point emphasized below in red:
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#19 | |||||
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Milwaukee
Posts: 6,081
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Re: A Few Thoughts on P.Eichler's List
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Making the analogy between "the flat earth theory" and us giving up on incredibly difficult to keep species that we like to look at in our glass boxes is just about the most fellacious analogy I've ever heard. In the grand scheme of things how would us never knowing how to sustain a Moorish Idol be help this hobby in any way besides us having 1001 fish we can keep alive longterm instead of 1000. In the grand scheme of the hobby there is no real benefit to us ever figuring out how to keep Moorish Idols or any of the other fish that are notoriously difficult. However, there are plenty of negatives if they continue to be collected because hobbysist keep buying even though they will most certainly die an early death. Here's an analogy for you, us continuing to try to keep Moorish Idols is about as productive as beating your head up against a wall repeatedly. Quote:
If you want to think longterm about our hobby think about how you can make is less wasteful and LEARN how we can breed the hundreds of fish we already know to be hardy. How about we spread awareness about the animals available in the hobby that have special needs so people can better LEARN how to keep them alive. The less we frivolously waste the less the chance of regulations on collection of the animals we love. Keep trying to figure out the ones we don't know how to keep and eventually some environmental group is going to catch on to just how dismal the survival rate is on some/all of these fish we keep. I'll tell you what, they're not just going to ban the collection of the difficult fish on my list. It's not like we need to keep fish, it's not like we do any good, we do it because we enjoy it. The only reason would need to know how to keep all animals is to quench our egos as the most dominant, most intelligent species on the planet. If we were really as smart as we think we are we'd know better how to admit defeat in many aspects of life, not just that really fragile fish we want in our pretty glass box. As a funny aside... Many of these species on that last have about as good of a chance for survival as keeping a Whaleshark in your swimming pool. Heck, put natural seawater in the pool and the whaleshark might survive longer than a lot of fish on that list. So why aren't you suggesting we keep the Whaleshark? We need to learn! ![]() Quote:
Last edited by Peter Eichler; 07/09/2007 at 09:14 PM. |
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#20 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Milwaukee
Posts: 6,081
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I must admit, I'm a little offended at some of your posts. But, not so much that I don't think we can have a healthy debate and I certainly wish you no ill will. So, what have you done for the hobby? |
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#21 |
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Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: Mississippi
Posts: 255
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Just have to add my 2cents, even tho it is somewhat off the subject, yet was brought up by hankthetank (I think). The ban on selling turtles less than 4 inches in diameter to other than educators in OK, and many other states is not the result of animal rights nuts actions, or in consideration of the turtles well being, etc. It is my understanding that the regulation is based soley on the belief that a child can not get a 4" or larger turtle in his/her mouth. Now that's hard to believe, but apparently this was a common enough practice that doctors or the government or public health officials or whoever thought could be involved in children contracting Salmonella. I heard the government is considering recinding that regulation, but the regulation will still exist on the books in many states that set their own laws. As for the fish list, I think it's great. As a hobbyist (not a rich man) I don't need to spend my money on fish that I am not equipped to keep or can't be easily kept. I sure do love my Pajama cardinals. I don't want to spend my money on hard/impossible to keep corals either.
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#22 |
Moved On
Join Date: Jun 2007
Posts: 161
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Angelfish were first imported into the U.S. at the beginning of the 20 th century.
What does cyanide have to do with it?People were using it to catch food fish long before they were used to collect fish for the hobby.Get your fish from responsible collection points like The Red Sea,Hawaii,Vanuatu,etc. The only reason batfish are difficult to feed is because they are not built to compete with fish that evolved to survive a reef.The last shipment of fish I brought in contained a Pinnatus,an Orbic,and 2 Teiras.All ate well because they were ordered from a responsible shipper and were set up right in the store. Since there have been no new advances in the last 10 to 15 years we know all we will ever know and should stop trying to lrearn more? Reductio ad absurdum is a quaint means of debate. As to what I have done for this hobby I have been employed at LFS' on at least a part-time basis almost continuosly since 1981.I have started more people in this hobby out on the right foot than I can count.Ask any serious hobbyist in the Phila.PA area about the guy with the ponytail. I have told people the straight story about what the consequences of their actions will probably be.And I have watched more animals than even you could count go to almost certain deaths.But over the years I have seen steady progress in increasing the number of species we are able to keep successfully.I,unlike you apparently,expect this to continue.Look outside the box of our hobby and see how human knowledge grows.Who are you or who is anyone to tell a person they can't have a Moorish Idol?While you stop short of actually saying it,I am confident you would support a law which would penalize people for attempting to have them.I guess I value human happiness more highly than you. I admitted I had received information that was untrue and posted it without independent verification.Mea culpa. Unlike alot of people who post on this forum I am only interested in exchanging ideas.I like to keep my personal life just that, personal,at least in forums designated for that purpose.I must admit a certain discomfort reading about the trials and tribulations that we all go through. My level of discomfort rises when someone presents an attitude which is so clearly anti-human. With that said I also bear you no ill will.I look forward to future debates,but not on this thread. P.S.Sk8r your views on acceptable economics are extremely distressing.All companies could make more money without competition?When and where has that ever worked?Please be specific! |
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#23 |
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Join Date: May 2007
Location: Charlotte, NC
Posts: 735
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I'm a SW newbie but I appreciate lists like Peter's. A responsible newbie will seek out lists like this as a guide. As we gather more information we'll make more decisions on where we make changes to how a majority may do things.
If we're the sort that will take a list of fish not for the newbie and use it as a guide when we're more experienced perhaps we're not meant to make the advances in fishkeeping and it should be left to others who are willing to educate themselves, think critically, and deal with the risks.
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#24 |
Seasoned reefer
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: In Quebec, Canada
Posts: 3,653
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![]() Sorry but thread like that make me ![]() hankthetank has a point as I think some fish on that list should be removed. in ex. Cardinal fish. but a guide for newbie is good but who gonna trust that list? the same kind of people that let a LFS owner sell them a tank in a 29g. You can't expect most LFS giving that list, let be realist. the 1000/1001 analogy is funny, where do you draw a lines? why not stop collecting and just keep tank breed clownfish? Fish die in the ocean anyway. my 2am .02
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Temp 80F, PH 8.5-8.0, Alk 6.8-7.2, Ca 430, Mg 1700, NO3 0-0.25, PO4 0.04, 34.4 PPT Lights @ 100% all others, 35% White Current Tank Info: 60g Cube, 120lbs live rocks, Hydra52 2x120W, 2 MP40+ 1 MP10 @ 70%, Phosban 550 GFO+Carbon, 200W Heater, SWC Skimmer, Kalk ATO, 150 gpd RODI |
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#25 | |
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Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Milwaukee
Posts: 6,081
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For the observers in this thread, read the two arguments and pick sides if you wish. However, let me make a few things clear. The list was made to increase awareness of difficult species in order to save some fish/inverts and hopefully in turn increase the enjoyment of hobbyists by helping them avoid trouble species. I don't think anyone here will disagree with me when I say having fish and corals die is not fun. It's also very frustrating when a LFS sells you something they claim to be hardy only to find out later that it's anything but. So, why not stick to the many hundreds of species we know we have a greater chance of maintaining in our systems longterm? In turn, why not have a list of those possible problem species to increase awareness and help people pick hardier critters for their reef tanks? There is no hidden agenda and I'm not trying to thrust my beliefs on anyone. The list is what it is! Last edited by Peter Eichler; 07/10/2007 at 01:25 AM. |
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