From the ever-wonderful Practical Fishkeeping:
‘Fisheries authorities in Myanmar have discovered a number of other populations of the Celestial pearl danio, Celestichthys margaritatus, a fish believed to have been driven to near extinction by over-collecting for the aquarium trade.
Myanmar’s Department of Fisheries (DOF) banned further exports of the species in February to allow them to assess the conservation status of Celestichthys margaritatus, and have identified a number of new localities which harbour populations of the species.
The species was previously believed to be endemic to pools in a single wetland area of Myanmar.
Tin Win, Managing Director of Myanmar-based fish exporter Hein Aquarium, told Practical Fishkeeping that a party of 10 officials from the Department of Fisheries and the Myanmar Fishery Federation conducted a survey and found the fish at five locations around Hong Pong.
[...] The fish, which were previously caught for food and sold as dried fish were a food of local poor people, according to Tin Win.
He says that they got a much bigger return on selling the fish for the aquarium trade compared to what they made when they sold the same fish for food:
“Due to this fish, the people in rural areas got some more income, because, previously the fish were dried and sold as dried fish as food for the poor people.”
Tin Win told Practical Fishkeeping that locals received 25 Kyats (approximately 25p) for a can of 500 Galaxy rasboras, but received 1p per fish when they sold them to the aquarium trade.’
What’s particularly interesting is the huge difference in profit that comes with selling the pearl danios (or Galaxy rasboras, as you may prefer to call them) to the aquarium trade instead of as food. From the given figures, 1p per fish works out to 500p for 500 inviduals, a mind-boggling increase of 20 times from the original food price.
The aquarium trade can indeed be very lucrative. Ideally, these monetary benefits would go directly to the ‘people in rural areas’ who collect the fish, and not just to the dealers and middlemen.
If properly managed, these wild fish populations can remain a valuable source of income for years to come.