Hi,
I film underwater in East Africa.
I have recently filmed a conservation effort to save an area of lagoon reef from being destroyed by guess what...Aquarium fishermen!
The local fishermen were noticing a huge decline in their fish catches, while the aquarium fishermen were taking out chunks of coral and bagging up lots of fish to send overseas, the locals doing the work were being paid a pittance, while the Belgium owner of the company was making his fortune.
It turns out that more than half of the fish bagged do not live to see an aquarium tank. And many don't even make it to the boat and the plastic bag is slit open and thrown overboard. Besides all this the men who dive to collect the fish are not trained and are using rusty old tanks...needless to say many of them die in the process.
This is a third world country where corruption is rife and laws are easy to get round when you can pay the right guy off.
I understand the aquarium industry is huge business, but I wonder if any of you know what a fish goes through to be taken out of its environment and transported thousands of miles. if they make it that far.
I would like to see the people on the receiving end (you guys) get involved in making better practices that leave our ocean here in a condition that makes it a safe, sustainable practice and where the fish have a good survival rate .
I would really appreciate a dialogue here on how to achieve this. I am sure Kenya is not the only place that suffers from the aquarium industry.
Many thanks,
Regards,
Lesley Hannah
I film underwater in East Africa.
I have recently filmed a conservation effort to save an area of lagoon reef from being destroyed by guess what...Aquarium fishermen!
The local fishermen were noticing a huge decline in their fish catches, while the aquarium fishermen were taking out chunks of coral and bagging up lots of fish to send overseas, the locals doing the work were being paid a pittance, while the Belgium owner of the company was making his fortune.
It turns out that more than half of the fish bagged do not live to see an aquarium tank. And many don't even make it to the boat and the plastic bag is slit open and thrown overboard. Besides all this the men who dive to collect the fish are not trained and are using rusty old tanks...needless to say many of them die in the process.
This is a third world country where corruption is rife and laws are easy to get round when you can pay the right guy off.
I understand the aquarium industry is huge business, but I wonder if any of you know what a fish goes through to be taken out of its environment and transported thousands of miles. if they make it that far.
I would like to see the people on the receiving end (you guys) get involved in making better practices that leave our ocean here in a condition that makes it a safe, sustainable practice and where the fish have a good survival rate .
I would really appreciate a dialogue here on how to achieve this. I am sure Kenya is not the only place that suffers from the aquarium industry.
Many thanks,
Regards,
Lesley Hannah