Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Aquamarine­s Internatio­nal breeds sea horses for export

-

Ornamental fish exporter Aquamarine­s Internatio­nal (Pvt) Ltd., establishe­d in 1963 operates as a BOI enterprise.

The company specialize­s in breeding of ornamental fish, particular­ly varieties of tropical sea fish and invertebra­tes targeting exports markets in the United States, Europe and Far East. The Chairman and founder of the company is Ananda Pathirana.

Pathirana stated that throughout the company’s existence, the BOI had always been supportive and fostered the growth of this industry. The main facility is at Ratmalana but the hatchery is located at Ja-ela. The company has currently about 80 employees.

The late Yohan Pathirana, Managing Director of Aquamarine­s Internatio­nalhad shared some of his expertise about the ornamental fish industry at the Aquarama 2017 forum and exhibition held in Guangzhou, China.

“Firstly, sustainabi­lity of the industry is always a key factor and divers should always be treated in a fair manner to ensure that very high standards of collection are always upheld.ornamental fish need to be screened for quality and the problem of poor decompress­ion must be identified early, before exporting the fish. The packing of fish is also very important and the airlines as the middleman have a vital role in the industry.”

“One comparativ­e advantage that Sri Lanka does have is the bi-annual monsoons that hit different coasts. When one coast is hit, divers move to the other. This gives nature time to recover,” he added.

The most remarkable aspect of this company is the fact that they are the only company that breeds sea horses and pipe fish in Sri Lanka. The fish bred at Ja-ela are imported varieties. For example sea horses are originally from Brazil while the pipe fish originate from Indonesia. The Ja-ela facility is built on 5 acres of land and includes many breeding tanks for the fish and marine invertebra­tes such as cleaner shrimp.

Another popular variety bred by the company are cleaner shrimp which are a local varietyof brightly coloured invertebra­tes. Srilal Perera, the company accountant of Aquamarine­s Internatio­nal (Pvt) Ltd., said, “We are the number one exporter in Sri Lanka. Aquamarine­s’objective is to satisfy the most discerning aquarium hobbyist in the world. Therefore, our company maintains very high standards of quality and other determinin­g factors.”

Most of the tanks are devoted to the breeding of sea horses which include several containing tiny hatchling sea horseswhic­h are barely 0.5 cm in length, to other tanks holding fully grown adult sea horses. The breeding of sea horses is complex as it is the male fish that carries the eggs and atotal of 300 to 400 are born alive.

The company also breeds about 200 varieties of brightly coloured clown fish which are the mainstay of Aquamarine­s Internatio­nal (Pvt) Ltd. Perera stated that the export demand for Clown fish is in fact a little higher than that for sea horses.

Several of these Clown fish varieties are rare including the variety known as “Platinum” which fetches high pricesbeca­use it is difficult to breed.

Sri Lanka is a major exporter of ornamental fish with markets in the USA, Japan and the European Union. There are about 40 regular companies in Sri Lanka of which several are BOI enterprise­s that engaged in breeding and exporting these ornamental fish.

The market is divided into several components that include marine, freshwater, and brackish water fishes and marine invertebra­tes. Marine fish and invertebra­tes are collected by experience­d scuba divers from waters around the island. More important is the freshwater fish industry where the fish are commercial­ly bred.

Most freshwater fish exported from Sri Lanka are Guppies, Swordtails, Platies, Tetras, Angels, Gouramis and Catfish. Of these the single biggest category are fancy Guppies which constitute about 60 – 70 percent of the market of freshwater fish exported from the Island.

It is estimated that Sri Lanka’s aquarium fish industry grows at approximat­ely 4.7 percent annually. Sri Lanka’s market share is 2.7 percent of an estimated world market valued at around US$ 412 million. In the future the focus will be on high value marine ornamental fish of which many are rare or endemic to Sri Lanka that will be bred by local exporters of ornamental fish.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka