Do you think about where your fish come from before they are caught?
By sedel1027
@sedel1027 (17846)
Cupertino, California
June 27, 2008 9:08am CST
I was talking to a pet store employee the other day and she was telling me that their fresh water fish are primarily farm raised, but some of their salt water fish are caught in the wild.
Then today, I read an article about how the "Nemo" (clown fish) is becoming hard to find in the wild because of the demand for the fish caused by the movie.
When you buy fish for your tanks, do you ask where they came from?
3 responses
@roxanne271 (2034)
• Trinidad And Tobago
1 Jul 08
There are quite a few freshwater fishes that come from the wild as well. One of them is the bala shark. They do not breed in captivity and the parrot fish is the same.
Any fish that can breed in captivity usually is. This helps to eliminate the high possibility of disease to a lower to none ratio.
I didn't hear about the clown fish becoming hard to find but yes I do know that they catch the salt water fishes in the wild and they are also harder to maintain.
Do I ask where they came from? Not always. It's common knowledge to me which are wild and which can be bred (unless it is another new imported species)
I am usually more curious about the names of some of these fishes and who imported, caught or bred them.
@oscarbartoni (2581)
• United States
28 Jun 08
Luckily many more salt water fish are being raised in captivity, including the clown fish. I know of several Live Fish Store that do not carry wild caught salt water fish. I myself breed freshwater fish and do know about where many have been raised. It is a great hobby and if you become interested enough (especially the children) it might keep you from doing some illegal or immoral "hobbies".
@ravinskye (8237)
• United States
27 Jun 08
nope, i had never really thought about it. that is a shame that you can't find the clown fish in the wild because of the nemo movie. i'm sure the want for them will go down though the older the movie gets. i don't have a salt water tank anyways. i would love too, but i'm not sure i could keep one going.




