This fish is worth $300,000 - New York Post This fish is worth $300,000 - New York Post Posted: 05 Jun 2016 12:00 AM PDT With exacting precision, the surgeon inserted the scalpel above the eyeball and cut out a snotty deposit of fatty tissue. The routine eye-lift was nearly complete when suddenly the patient awoke, suffocating, and began to flop about on the table. The audience gasped. Knowing time was of the essence, the surgeon scooped up the patient in his arms, raced across the stage, and dropped her into a tank of water. She revived. Because she was a fish. Yes, fish eye-lifts exist. As do fin jobs and tail tucks. The operating theater was a mall in Jakarta, Indonesia, where a pet expo was under way. As for the patient, she survived, her formerly droopy eyes now bright and perky. A good thing, too, as this was no ordinary goldfish but rather an Asian arowana, the world's most expensive aquarium denizen, rumored to sell for as mu...
Abstract The global marine aquarium trade has created new local markets across the planet, including in Indonesia, now the second-largest exporting country of marine aquarium fish in the world. Participating in the global aquarium trade has been touted as a potentially sustainable addition to fisher livelihoods, but scant data exist showing the numbers of fish coming off the reef and how those fish contribute to income. To determine how participants in the trade incorporate aquarium species in their livelihoods, we examine source-level aquarium fish collecting and trading data in the Banggai Archipelago, a region in Central Sulawesi that has become a significant source for popular aquarium, also known as ornamental, fish species. Using a sustainable livelihoods lens, we examine this data to understand how participants in the aquarium trade both contribute to as well as benefit from the trade and consider how their participation relates to emerging Blue Justice principles. From one year...
Three years ago, I started my journey as a fish owner through Exotic Pets, so I was beyond excited when they opened their new store, Aquatic Pets . The new fish store, which could be the largest store in town dedicated to all things fish, can be found at 601 N. West Street in the former space that used to be Pet World. It's also the southwest corner of Central and West Street, across the street from the Dillons grocery store. This place has everything, including supplies, food, tanks, plants, lighting, and more fish than I've ever seen in one area. The grand opening day for Aquatic Pets was Monday, June 10 and there was a little line already for people waiting to check the place out. Walking inside was like seeing the city's closest thing to a full-blown Aquarium. This isn't your typical fish store either. While they sell some basic fish staples like guppies, mollies, and betas, they also carry various species that I couldn'...
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