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Coral Reefs in the Balance
Exotic Fish Species Hunted for Aquariums and Restaurants
Hear reports in this series:

audio icon Part 1: Live Fish Markets in Hong Kong

audio icon Part 2: Diving for Seahorses in the Philippines

audio icon Part 3: Promoting Safer Fishing Methods
June 28-30, 2004 -- Hong Kong, the bustling entry point of East Asian commerce, is the hub of the global live fish trade. Not all the fish found there end up in home aquariums. Some fish, like the giant grouper, humphead wrasse and coral trout, are caught live near Pacific coral reefs and kept in tanks until they are served up in restaurants. Depending on the size and species, a single fish can cost hundreds of dollars.

And in Chinese medicinal markets, another species of reef-dweller, the seahorse, is sold to make traditional treatments for impotence and other ailments. The trade in these reef species is on the rise, and biologists say the reef populations are threatened.

NPR's Chris Joyce joins Dr. Yvonne Sadovy, considered one of the world's experts on the live fish and aquarium trade, at the Hong Kong market to investigate the reef fish trade.

The journey continues to the tropical reefs of the Pacific. On the tiny island of Jandayan, near the island of Cebu in the Philippines, "lantern-divers" swim along the reefs in the darkness of night to hunt for one of the world's most exotic animals -- the seahorse.

Under the glow of their lanterns, the divers capture seahorses to sell to aquarium fish dealers in the U.S., Europe and Asia. Dead ones go to the traditional Chinese medicine market. It's a meager living, but there are few alternatives for making a living.

Joyce and the Radio Expeditions crew travel to Jandayan to join biologist Amanda Vincent and the lantern fishers to learn about Project Seahorse, an international effort to preserve this island's way of life while keeping seahorse populations from dying out.

The spectacular and exotic fish that fill aquariums all over the world are caught wild in coral reefs by divers like Fred Durayas. Durayas is a Filipino who once dynamited reefs to get fish to eat. He switched to catching aquarium fish using cyanide to stun them -- but the cyanide is killing the reefs.

Now Durayas is learning to catch these exotic fish with nets. Joyce travels to the Camotes Islands of the Philippines to investigate a program to help people like Durayas make a living, while preserving the reefs that shape their livelihood.

Other Radio Expeditions of the World's Oceans:

read more Echoes of the 'Sea of Cortez'

read more Space Technology Puts Oceans in Focus

read more Explorer Finds Kennedy's WWII Boat

read more Sanctuary for Tortugas' Marine Life

read more Whales and Their Changing Environment

read more Legacy of the Black Sea

read more Diving with Deepworker

read more Call of the Whale

read more Voyage of the Endeavour

read more After the Blue Fin Tuna

read more More Radio Expeditions Reports



Large humphead wrasse in small tank in Guangzhou, southern China. Large humphead wrasse destined for a gourmet restaurant fills a small tank in Guangzhou, southern China.
Photo: Liu Min
View larger image


Divers in the Phillippines hunt for tropical fish Divers hunt for tropical fish in the Philippine Islands.
Photo: Jose Ingles


Tank full of tropical fish in Hong Kong A tank full of tropical fish tempts diners in Hong Kong.
Photo: Yvonne Sadovy


Sadavoy with tropical fish hunters in the Phillipines Dr. Yvonne Sadovy, considered one of the world's experts on the live fish and aquarium trade, with Filipino fishermen.
Photo: Jose Ingles

Clownfish in a jar A clownfish captured on a reef in the Philippines.
Photo: Jose Ingles






   
   
   
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