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Mysterious breeding habits of aquarium fish vex experts

PENYABANGAN, Indonesia (AP) 鈥 It took a broken air conditioner for Tom Bowling to figure out 鈥 after nearly eight months of failure 鈥 how to breed the coveted pink-yellow tropical fish known as blotched anthias.
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Fish breeder Wen-Ping Su feeds fish at a breeding facility in Buleleng, Bali, Indonesia, Wednesday, April 13, 2022. Su says he has 10 different keys to success that he's been developing for nearly two decades. Those keys have enabled him to breed fish that no one else has, including striped regal angelfish and frilly black-bodied, orange-rimmed pinnatus batfish. (AP Photo/Tatan Syuflana)

PENYABANGAN, Indonesia (AP) 鈥 It took a broken air conditioner for Tom Bowling to figure out 鈥 after nearly eight months of failure 鈥 how to breed the coveted pink-yellow tropical fish known as blotched anthias.

Bowling, an ornamental fish breeder based in Palau, had kept the fish in cool water, trying to replicate the temperatures the deep-water creatures are usually found in. But when the air conditioner broke the water temperature rose by a few degrees overnight -- with surprising results. 鈥淭hey started spawning 鈥 they went crazy, laying eggs everywhere,鈥 said Bowling.

Experts around the world tinker over water temperature, futz with lights, and try various mixes of microscopic food particles in hopes of happening upon the particular and peculiar set of conditions that will inspire ornamental fish to breed. Experts hope to steer the aquarium fish trade away from wild-caught fish, which are often that can hurt coral ecosystems.

PROPER AMBIANCE REQUIRED

Most of the millions of glittering fish that dart around saltwater aquariums in the U.S., Europe, China and elsewhere are taken from coral reefs in the Philippines, Indonesia and other tropical countries.

Trappers often stun them using chemicals like cyanide. They are then transferred to middlemen and then flown across the globe, ending up in aquariums in homes, malls, restaurants and medical offices. 鈥渓arge percentages鈥 die on the way.

Part of the problem: only about 4% of saltwater aquarium fish can be bred in captivity, largely because many have elaborate reproductive cycles and delicate early life stages that require sometimes mysterious conditions that scientists and breeders struggle to reproduce.

For decades experts have been working to unlock the secrets of marine fish breeding. Breakthroughs don't come quickly, said Paul Andersen, head of the Coral Reef Aquarium Fisheries Campaign, which works to support sustainable coral reef aquarium fisheries.

鈥淚t requires years of investment, research and development, oftentimes to make incremental steps," he said. And then even longer, he said, to bring newly captive-bred species to market.

The Moorish idol, a black-and-yellow striped fish with a mane-like dorsal fin spine, requires lots of space. Squiggle-striped green mandarins prefer to spawn just before the sun sets, requiring very particular lighting cycles to breed in captivity. As Bowling discovered in Palau, blotched anthias require very specific temperatures.

鈥淵ou've got to pay attention to all the parameters that will make a fish happy,鈥 said Andersen. 鈥淪ome species are really gentle, delicate and sensitive to these kinds of things.鈥

FRAGILE EARLY DAYS

After fish spawn, breeders often find themselves facing the most challenging part of the process: the larval period, which is the time just after the fish hatches, before it develops into a juvenile. The flow of water has to be just right, but they are so fragile they have to be protected from filters and even tank walls.

The first feeding is also crucial, said Andrew Rhyne, a marine biology professor at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island. During the first days many larval fish don't have eyes or mouths, instead living off their yolk.

鈥淲hen they finally do form eyes or mouths it鈥檚 so important to have created an environment that allows them to get a first bite of zooplankton so they can get a little stronger and continue to grow,鈥 said Rhyne. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 kind of been the magic for all of this.鈥

Often that first bite is a critical part of the ocean food system that harbors its own mysteries: called copepods, they are microscopic crustaceans that provide vital nutrients to larval fish and are key for breeders around the world.

At the University of Florida Tropical Aquaculture Laboratory in Ruskin 鈥 where the blue tang 鈥淒ory鈥 fish popularized by the movie Finding Nemo was successfully bred for the first time 鈥 associate professor Matt DiMaggio and his students have been working to produce copepods. But even the copepods haven proven to be difficult to raise.

Mort than 10,000 miles away from the Florida lab, on the tropical northern coast of Bali, Indonesia, renowned fish breeder Wen-Ping Su walks between large cement fish tanks, his own zooplankton recipe churning in a circular tank nearby.

Su said he has 10 different keys to success that he's been developing for nearly two decades. Those keys have enabled him to breed fish that no one else has, including striped regal angelfish and frilly black-bodied, orange-rimmed pinnatus batfish.

VALUABLE SECRETS

But asking Wen-Ping Su if he鈥檒l share details, his answer comes quickly, with his hands crossing to form an X in front of his big smile: 鈥淣o.鈥

It鈥檚 the same sentiment echoed by Bowling, who pauses when asked about sharing the secrets to his most high-profile successes. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the part I really don鈥檛 want to tell you,鈥 he laughs.

Those secrets are their livelihoods. The blotched anthias Bowling bred after the broken air conditioner are listed for $700 on his company鈥檚 website. Fish bred by Su also sell for hundreds of dollars online.

But in the past five years there are some organizations 鈥 such as Rising Tide Conservation, a non-governmental organization dedicated to developing and promoting aquaculture 鈥 that have worked to promote information sharing, said DiMaggio.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 helped to accelerate the number of species that we鈥檝e been able to raise in during that time and the variety of species too,鈥 he said, highlighting species such as wrasses, butterflyfish and tangs.

Rhyne鈥檚 research lab 鈥 which includes breeding toothy queen triggerfish and red-striped yasha gobies鈥 has been working to share his research with breeders as well.

But Rhyne and other breeders concede that it's unlikely all aquarium fish will be raised in captivity because some are just too difficult, while others are so abundant in nature.

And breeding a fish doesn't guarantee it will make it to or do well on the market, said Rhyne. Captive bred fish cost more, and experts in the fish industry recognize that it will take time to convince consumers should pay more for them.

鈥淗ow do we market aquaculture fish the way that we market organic foods, you know, and demand that premium price point?鈥 said Andersen, from the Coral Reef Aquarium Fisheries Campaign. 鈥淭he marketing is really important.鈥

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Associated Press video journalist Marshall Ritzel reported from Florida. Kathy Young contributed to this report from New York. Andi Jatmiko, Edna Tarigan and Tatan Syuflana contributed from Indonesia.

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The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute鈥檚 Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

Victoria Milko And Marshall Ritzel, The Associated Press

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