The
global aquatic pet trade encompasses a wide diversity of freshwater and marine
organisms. While relying on a continual supply of healthy, vibrant aquatic
animals, few sustainability initiatives exist within this sector. Public
aquariums overlap this industry by acquiring many of the same species through
the same sources. End users are also similar, as many aquarium visitors are
home aquarists.
Here
we posit that this overlap with the pet trade gives aquariums significant
opportunity to increase the sustainability of the trade in aquarium fishes and
invertebrates. Improving the sustainability ethos and practices of the aquatic
pet trade can carry a conservation benefit in terms of less waste, and
protection of intact functioning ecosystems, at the same time as maintaining
its economic and educational benefits and impacts. The relationship would also
move forward the goal of public aquariums to advance aquatic conservation in a
broad sense.
For
example, many public aquariums in North America have been instrumental in
working with the seafood industry to enact positive change toward increased
sustainability. The actions include being good consumers themselves, providing
technical knowledge, and providing educational and outreach opportunities.
These
same opportunities exist for public aquariums to partner with the ornamental
fish trade, which will serve to improve business, create new, more ethical and
more dependable sources of aquatic animals for public aquariums, and perhaps
most important, possibly transform the home aquarium industry from a threat,
into a positive force for aquatic conservation.
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