Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

A clear and toxic danger

Cyanide fishing that supplies global aquarium trade degrades coral ecosystems

- By Victoria Milko, Firdia Lisnawati and Kathy Young

LES, Indonesia — After diving into the warm sea off the coast of northern Bali, Indonesia, Made Partiana hovers above a bed of coral, holding his breath and scanning for flashes of color and movement.

Hours later, exhausted, he returns to a rocky beach, towing plastic bags filled with his darting, exquisite quarry: tropical fish of all shades and shapes.

Millions of saltwater fish like these are caught in Indonesia and other countries every year to fill ever more elaborate aquariums in living rooms, waiting rooms and restaurant­s around the world with vivid, otherworld­ly life.

“It’s just so much fun to just watch the antics between different varieties of fish,” said Jack Siravo, a Rhode Island fish enthusiast who began building aquariums after an accident paralyzed him. He now has four saltwater tanks and calls the fish “an endless source of fascinatio­n.”

But the long journey from places like Bali to places like Rhode Island is perilous for the fish and for the reefs they come from. Some are captured using squirts of cyanide to stun them. Many die along the way.

And even when they are captured carefully, by people like Partiana, experts say the global demand for these fish is contributi­ng to the degradatio­n of delicate coral ecosystems, especially in major export countries such as Indonesia and the Philippine­s.

There have been efforts to reduce some of the most destructiv­e practices, such as cyanide fishing. But the trade is extraordin­arily difficult to regulate and track as it stretches from smallscale

fishermen in tropical seaside villages through local middlemen, export warehouses, internatio­nal trade hubs and finally to pet stores in the U.S., China, Europe and elsewhere.

“There’s no enforcemen­t, no management, no data collection,” said Gayatri Reksodihar­djoLilley, founder of LINI, a Bali-based nonprofit for the conservati­on and management of coastal marine resources.

That leaves enthusiast­s like Siravo in the dark.

“Consumers often don’t know where their fish are coming from, and they don’t know how they are collected,” said Andrew Rhyne, a marine biology professor at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island.

Cyanide stuns

Most ornamental saltwater fish species are caught in the wild because breeding them in captivity can be expensive, difficult or often impossible. The conditions they need to reproduce are extremely particular and poorly understood, even by scientists and expert breeders who have been trying for years.

Small-scale collection and export of saltwater aquarium fish began in Sri Lanka in the 1930s and the trade has grown steadily since.

Nearly 3 million homes in the U.S. keep saltwater fish as pets, according to a 20212022 American Pet Products Associatio­n survey. (Freshwater aquariums are far more common because freshwater fish are generally cheaper and easier to breed and care for.) About 7.6 million saltwater fish are imported into the U.S. every year.

For decades, a common fishing technique has involved cyanide, with dire consequenc­es for fish and marine ecosystems.

Fishermen crush the blue or white pellets into a bottle filled with water. The diluted cyanide forms a poisonous mixture fishermen squirt onto coral reefs, where fish usually hide in crevices. The fish become temporaril­y stunned, allowing fishermen to easily pick or scoop them from the coral.

Many die in transit, weakened by the cyanide — which means even more fish need to be captured to meet demand. The chemicals damage the living coral and make it more difficult for new coral to grow.

Lax enforcemen­t

Cyanide fishing has been banned in countries such as Indonesia and the Philippine­s but enforcemen­t of the law remains difficult, and experts say the practice continues.

Part of the problem is geography, Reksodihar­djoLilley says. In the vast archipelag­o of Indonesia, there are about 34,000 miles of coastline across some 17,500 islands. That makes monitoring the first step of the tropical fish supply chain a task so gargantuan it is all but ignored.

“We have been working at the national level, trying to push national government to give attention to ornamental fish in Indonesia, but it’s fallen on deaf ears,” she said.

Indonesian officials counter that laws do exist that require exporters to meet quality, sustainabi­lity, traceabili­ty and animal welfare conditions. “We will arrest anyone who implements destructiv­e fishing. There are punishment­s for it,” said Machmud, an official at Indonesia’s marine affairs and fisheries ministry, who uses only one name.

‘No real record-keeping’

Another obstacle to monitoring and regulating of the trade is the quick pace that the fish can move from one location to another, making it difficult to trace their origins.

At a fish export warehouse in Denpasar, thousands of fish a day can be delivered to the big industrial-style facility located off a main road in Bali’s largest city. Trucks and motorbikes arrive with white Styrofoam coolers crammed with plastic bags of fish from around the archipelag­o. The fish are swiftly unpacked, sorted into tanks or new plastic bags and given fresh seawater. Carcasses of ones that died in transit are tossed into a basket or onto the pavement, then later thrown in the trash.

Some fish will remain in small rectangula­r tanks in the warehouse for weeks, while others are shipped out quickly in plastic bags in cardboard boxes, fulfilling orders from the U.S., Europe and elsewhere. According to data provided to The Associated Press by Indonesian government officials, the U.S. was the largest importer of saltwater aquarium fish from the country.

Once the fish make the plane ride halfway around the world from Indonesia to the U.S., they’re checked by the Fish and Wildlife Service, which cross-references the shipment with customs declaratio­n forms.

But that’s designed to ensure no protected fish, such as the endangered Banggai cardinalfi­sh, are being imported. The process cannot determine whether fish were caught legally.

A U.S. law known as the Lacey Act bans traffickin­g in fish, wildlife or plants that were illegally taken, possessed, transporte­d or sold, according to the laws in the country of origin or sale. That means that any fish caught using cyanide in a country where it’s prohibited would be illegal to import or sell in the U.S.

But that helps little when it’s impossible to tell how the fish was caught. For example, no test exists to provide accurate results on whether a fish has been caught with cyanide, said Rhyne, the Roger Williams marine biology expert.

“The reality is that the Lacey Act isn’t used often because generally there’s no real record-keeping or way to enforce it,” said Rhyne.

Local response

In the absence of rigorous national enforcemen­t, conservati­on groups and local fishermen have long been working to reduce cyanide fishing in places like

Les, a well-known saltwater aquarium fishing town tucked between the mountains and ocean in northern Bali.

Partiana started catching fish — using cyanide — shortly after elementary school, when his parents could no longer afford to pay for his education. Every catch would help provide a few dollars of income for his family.

But over the years Partiana began to notice the reef was changing. “I saw the reef dying, turning black,” he said. “You could see there were less fish.”

He became part of a group of local fishermen who were taught by a local conservati­on organizati­on how to use nets, care for the reef and patrol the area to guard against cyanide use. He later became a lead trainer for the organizati­on, and has trained more than 200 fellow aquarium fishermen across Indonesia in use of less harmful techniques.

Reksodihar­djo-Lilley says it is this type of local education and training that should be expanded to reduce harmful fishing. “People can see that they’re directly benefiting from the reefs being in good health.”

For Partiana, now the father of two children, it’s not just for his benefit. “I hope that (healthier) coral reefs will make it possible for the next generation of children and grandchild­ren under me.” He wants them to be able to “see what coral looks like and that there can be ornamental fish in the sea.”

In Rhode Island, Siravo, the fish enthusiast, shares Partiana’s hopes for a less destructiv­e saltwater aquarium industry.

“I don’t want fish that are not collected sustainabl­y,” he said. “Because I won’t be able to get fish tomorrow if I buy (unsustaina­bly caught fish) today.”

 ?? ALEX LINDBLOOM/AP PHOTOS 2021 ?? Made Partiana, left, used to catch fish using cyanide. He eventually became part of a group taught to use nets and patrol the area to guard against cyanide use.
ALEX LINDBLOOM/AP PHOTOS 2021 Made Partiana, left, used to catch fish using cyanide. He eventually became part of a group taught to use nets and patrol the area to guard against cyanide use.
 ?? ?? The endangered Banggai cardinalfi­sh is one of the protected fish the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service check for in imports.
The endangered Banggai cardinalfi­sh is one of the protected fish the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service check for in imports.
 ?? ?? Workers in Indonesia prepare fish for shipment to the city of Denpasar in Bali to be exported.
Workers in Indonesia prepare fish for shipment to the city of Denpasar in Bali to be exported.
 ?? ?? Made Partiana, left, and another villager sort fish they have caught in Indonesian waters.
Made Partiana, left, and another villager sort fish they have caught in Indonesian waters.

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