Quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into Switzerland and an estimation of imports from the European Union

Millions of marine ornamental fishes are traded every year. Today, over half of the known nearly 4000 coral reef fish species are in trade with poor or no monitoring and demand is increasing. This study investigates their trade into and through Switzerland by analyzing import documents for live anim...

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Main Author: Monica V. Biondo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-07-01
Series:Global Ecology and Conservation
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198941730094X
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spelling doaj-11a96ac9082843fdb95d8a3a574f6bf12020-11-24T22:37:30ZengElsevierGlobal Ecology and Conservation2351-98942017-07-0111C9510510.1016/j.gecco.2017.05.006Quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into Switzerland and an estimation of imports from the European UnionMonica V. BiondoMillions of marine ornamental fishes are traded every year. Today, over half of the known nearly 4000 coral reef fish species are in trade with poor or no monitoring and demand is increasing. This study investigates their trade into and through Switzerland by analyzing import documents for live animals. In 2009, 151 import declarations with attached species lists for marine ornamental fishes from non-EU countries totaled 28 356 specimens. The 62% of the fishes remaining in Switzerland, comprised 440 marine species from 45 families, the rest transited to EU and non-EU countries. Despite the recognized large trade volume for the European region, due to bilateral agreements, no data is collected for imports from the EU. However, inferred data shows that more than 200 000 marine ornamental fishes could be imported into Switzerland every year and an unknown quantity re-exported. As biggest import region, it is therefore safe to assume, that the European region is importing at least as many marine ornamental fishes as the US. There is no adequate data-collecting system known to be in place in any country for monitoring this trade. The EU Trade Control and Expert System (TRACES) to monitor animal diseases could be adjusted to gather compulsory information for the EU and Switzerland. More than half of the species imported into Switzerland are not assessed by the IUCN and therefore marked as ‘not evaluated’ on the Red List. Overall, 70% of all known coral reef fish species have not been evaluated. If coral reef fishes are threatened or endangered due to large, possibly unsustainable numbers traded, it may be rational to monitor the trade in these species through the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES).http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198941730094XMarine ornamental fishesInternational tradeTrade monitoringTrade information system TRACESIUCN red listCITES convention on international trade of endangered species
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Monica V. Biondo
spellingShingle Monica V. Biondo
Quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into Switzerland and an estimation of imports from the European Union
Global Ecology and Conservation
Marine ornamental fishes
International trade
Trade monitoring
Trade information system TRACES
IUCN red list
CITES convention on international trade of endangered species
author_facet Monica V. Biondo
author_sort Monica V. Biondo
title Quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into Switzerland and an estimation of imports from the European Union
title_short Quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into Switzerland and an estimation of imports from the European Union
title_full Quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into Switzerland and an estimation of imports from the European Union
title_fullStr Quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into Switzerland and an estimation of imports from the European Union
title_full_unstemmed Quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into Switzerland and an estimation of imports from the European Union
title_sort quantifying the trade in marine ornamental fishes into switzerland and an estimation of imports from the european union
publisher Elsevier
series Global Ecology and Conservation
issn 2351-9894
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Millions of marine ornamental fishes are traded every year. Today, over half of the known nearly 4000 coral reef fish species are in trade with poor or no monitoring and demand is increasing. This study investigates their trade into and through Switzerland by analyzing import documents for live animals. In 2009, 151 import declarations with attached species lists for marine ornamental fishes from non-EU countries totaled 28 356 specimens. The 62% of the fishes remaining in Switzerland, comprised 440 marine species from 45 families, the rest transited to EU and non-EU countries. Despite the recognized large trade volume for the European region, due to bilateral agreements, no data is collected for imports from the EU. However, inferred data shows that more than 200 000 marine ornamental fishes could be imported into Switzerland every year and an unknown quantity re-exported. As biggest import region, it is therefore safe to assume, that the European region is importing at least as many marine ornamental fishes as the US. There is no adequate data-collecting system known to be in place in any country for monitoring this trade. The EU Trade Control and Expert System (TRACES) to monitor animal diseases could be adjusted to gather compulsory information for the EU and Switzerland. More than half of the species imported into Switzerland are not assessed by the IUCN and therefore marked as ‘not evaluated’ on the Red List. Overall, 70% of all known coral reef fish species have not been evaluated. If coral reef fishes are threatened or endangered due to large, possibly unsustainable numbers traded, it may be rational to monitor the trade in these species through the Convention on International Trade of Endangered Species (CITES).
topic Marine ornamental fishes
International trade
Trade monitoring
Trade information system TRACES
IUCN red list
CITES convention on international trade of endangered species
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S235198941730094X
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