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PREFACE


PREFACE



The goal of each serious aquariast is more than simply to display some pretty fish. The serious aquariast hopes to create a little environment to present some of nature's most special and spectacular creatures, fresh and brackish water tropical fish. Unfortunately, many species of fish are endangered or on the brink of extinction because of mankind. The destruction of rainforests, the damming of rivers, the polluting of rivers, and the introduction of non-native species are acts which most directly affect tropical fish.


Tropical rainforest waters are the home to the majority of freshwater fish species. The Amazon Basin alone has over 2300 known species and possibly as many unidentified species; but the world's rainforests are threatened. The rainforests are being reduced at a rate of about 1 acre per second or 116 square miles a day (Orr 7), translating to 42,340 square miles lost a year. Each day, 40 to 250 species become extinct (Orr 7), and each year, as many as 92,000 species are lost. Although tropical fish make up only a tiny part of the species lost to extinction as a result of deforestation, they are still threatened daily by rainforest destruction. The destruction of rainforest affects fish species by loss of habitat from erosion and inconsistent weather and flooding seasons. Erosion increases sediment load in the water which muddies the water, affecting fish that rely primarily on eyesight, and coating fish eggs with sediment, affecting the egg hatching. Erosion also affects marine fishes as the increased sediment load of rivers flows into the ocean and covers nearby coral reefs killing the coral and forcing the fish that rely on the coral to find unaffected reefs. Reading this forward will take approximately 4 minutes. During that time 240 acres of tropical rainforest that took over 70 million years to develop has been destroyed forever. If the destruction of the tropical rainforests proceeds at its current rate of over one acre per second, the forests will disappear within the span of a human lifetime. When these precious forests are gone, many of their treasures, both discovered and undiscovered, will be lost. The tropical rainforest and its species are unique and irreplaceable; once they are gone humanity will have nothing but regrets for these species will be gone for all time.


Dams are another factor that hurt fish populations. Dams flood out rivers, streams, and creeks into one large lake. Often this lake floods forests permanently, causing the vegetation to decay and altering the water conditions. Species that have adapted to river-life must adapt to the altered conditions, or perish. The dam prevents the upstream migration necessary for some species to spawn. Examples of the loss of fish species after dam construction can be found in the Aswan Dam on the Nile and the Amistad Dam on the Colorado. Many countries, including our own, continue to dam rivers having biologically rich environments.


Pollution is another destructive factor produced by human use of river systems. The effects of pollution range from the subtle, slow impact of sediments from agriculture to the dramatic devastation of chemical spills that can destroy river systems For example, a recent cyanide spill on the Essequibo River of Guyana decimated the local fish population and threatened large animal life. Similarly, a few years ago, an oil slick on the Rio Napo in Ecuador dealt a blow to the delicate ecology of one of the most biodiverse regions on the planet.


Less dramatic human activity can have a significant impact on local fishes. For example, the introduction of alien fish species into a water source can be very destructive to the native fish population. The introduction of the Nile Perch (Lates niloticus) as a food fish into Lake Victoria has led to the extinction of several Haplochromine species and threatened virtually all other fish species of the lake. Fish species can be introduced for reasons other than supplying food. The waterways of parts of Florida are over-run by foreign fish species which have been released by fish keepers who have become bored with their pets or have been overwhelmed by the size of the fish.


Less than 10% freshwater tropical aquarium fish caught in wild. Overfishing for the hobby is not a major cause of declining fish populations, though some species have been affected by over-collecting. For example, some native collectors near Iquitos, Peru report that catches of aquarium-bound fish are smaller than in the past. Commercial fishing for food fish is the main cause to over-fishing. Throughout the Amazon, food fish are in lesser numbers and smaller in size than in the past. For example, the Arapaima--which earlier was regularly found to exceed 10' (3 m)--is rarely encountered today at a size greater than 8' (2.45 m).


Each aquariast needs to be aware of the conditions that affect the natural environments which are the source of the wide variety of fishes that are available today. We should all work to preserve the natural world, which not only makes possible our hobby, but also supports the human species.

New report: Global Warming is harming Lake Tanganyika fish







Recent news

Wildlife in the tropics plummets by over 60 percent

(05/15/2012) In 48 years wildlife populations in the tropics, the region that holds the bulk of the world's biodiversity, have fallen by an alarming 61 percent, according to the most recent update to the Living Planet Index. Produced by the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL), the index currently tracks almost 10,000 populations of 2,688 vertebrate species (including mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish) in both the tropics and temperate regions.


Educating the next generation of conservation leaders in Colombia

(05/14/2012) Colombia's northern departments of Cordoba and Bolivar are home to an abundance of coral reefs, estuaries, mangroves forests, and forests. Rich in both marine and terrestrial wildlife, local communities depend on the sea and land for survival, yet these ecosystems are imperiled by booming populations, overexploitation, and unsustainable management. Since 2007, an innovative education program in the region, the Guardians of Nature, has worked to teach local children about the ecology of the region, hoping to instill a conservation ethic that will aid both the present and the future.


Manta rays tracked by satellite

(05/11/2012) Satellite tracking technology has revealed new insights into the behavior of manta rays, reports the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). The findings are published in this week's issue of the journal PLoS.


Featured video: the oceans and Rio+20

(05/10/2012) A new video by Pew Environment Group and the Zoological Society of London (ZSL) hopes to convince policy-makers attending the Rio+20 Summit on Sustainable Development this summer that urgent action is needed to save the ocean's from an environmental crisis.


Over 30 Yangtze porpoises found dead in China as population nears extinction

(05/01/2012) Six years after the Yangtze river dolphin (Lipotes vexillifer), or baiji, was declared "functionally extinct" by scientists, another marine mammal appears on the edge of extinction in China's hugely degraded Yangtze River. In less than two months, 32 Yangtze finless porpoises (Neophocaena asiaeorientalis asiaeorientalis), a subspecies of the finless porpoise, have been dead found in Dongting and Poyang Lakes in the Yangtze, reports the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF).


Carnage in Komodo: world-famous reef destroyed by poachers' bombs

(04/25/2012) Illegal fishermen have been utilizing homemade bombs to kill fish off the coast of Komodo Island, Indonesia, reports the Associated Press (AP); the bombs have not only injured fish populations in the protected area, but has also blasted biodiverse coral reefs popular with tourists. A scuba teacher told the AP that a section of Tatawa Besar coral reef, a popular diving spot, had been "blasted, ripped off, turned upside down."



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Copyright Rhett Butler 1994-2009

The copy for fish.mongabay.com was written in 1994-1995. Therefore some information such as scientific names may be out of date. For this, I apologize. Feel free to send corrections to me.