| Literature DB >> 22235306 |
Joanna M Murray1, Gordon J Watson, Adriana Giangrande, Margherita Licciano, Matt G Bentley.
Abstract
The marine aquarium industry has great potential to generate jobs in low-income coastal communities creating incentives for the maintenance of a healthy coral reef, if effectively managed. In the absence of current monitoring or legislation to govern the trade, baseline information regarding the species, number and source location of animals traded is missing despite being critical for its successful management and sustainability. An industry assessment to establish the number and provenance of species of ornamental polychaetes (sabellids and serpulids) traded was undertaken across UK wholesalers and retailers. Six geographical regions exporting fan worms were identified. Singapore contributed the highest percentage of imports, but of only one worm "type" whereas Bali, the second largest source, supplied five different worm "types". Over 50% of UK retailers were supplied by one wholesaler while the remainder were stocked by a mixture of one other wholesaler and/or direct imports from the source country. We estimate that up to 18,500 ornamental polychaetes (16,980 sabellids and 1,018 serpulids) are sold annually in the UK revealing a drastic underestimation of currently accepted trade figures. Incorrect identification (based on exporting region or visual characteristics) of traded animals exacerbates the inaccuracy in market quantification, although identification of preserved sabellids using published keys proved just as inconclusive with high within-species variability and the potential for new or cryptic species. A re-description of the polychaete groups traded using a combination of molecular and morphological techniques is necessary for effective identification and market quantification. This study provides the first assessment of ornamental polychaetes but more importantly highlights the issues surrounding the collection of baseline information necessary to manage the aquarium trade. We recommend that future management should be community based and site-specific with financial and educational support from NGOs, local governments and industry members.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22235306 PMCID: PMC3250455 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0029543
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Export location of ornamental polychaetes.
| Export Region | Type name | Number Imported | % of Total TMC Imports |
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| Midnight | 381 | 0.9% |
| Pink and white | 4,760 | 11% | |
| Spiral | 1,561 | 4% | |
| Yellow | 1,886 | 4.5% | |
| Hard Tube (Serpulid) | 2,357 | 6% | |
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| Orange and White | 12,851 | 31% |
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| Common | 13,343 | 32% |
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| Cluster duster | 1,107 | 3% |
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| Caribbean | 3,190 | 7.5% |
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| Giant Hawaiian | 228 | 0.5% |
Number and percentage contribution of the different “types” of worms identified by the Tropical Marine Centre from the six exporting regions which supply the TMC's ornamental polychaetes between 2007 and 2009. Data includes total import sales for TMC.
Figure 1“Types” of tropical polychaetes imported by TMC.
“Types” of tropical polychaetes imported into the UK by TMC. a) “Midnight”, b) “Pink and white”, c) “Spiral”, d) “Yellow”, e) “Hard tube” from Bali; f) “Orange and white” from the Indian Ocean, g) “common” from Singapore, h) “cluster duster” from Dominican Republic, and i) “Caribbean” from the Philippines (photographs by J. Murray).
The collection location and morphological features of Sabellastarte species traded in the UK.
| TMC “type” name | Region collected | Group | Key characters | Conclusion | Known distribution |
| Common | Singapore (2) |
| Short | Cf. | Possibly endemic to Samoan region |
| Common | Singapore (2) |
| Short | Cf. | Indo Pacific Oceans |
| Common | Singapore (3) |
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| Common | Singapore (10) |
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| Caribbean | Philippines (5) |
| Short thx (as long as wide), short | ||
| Caribbean | Philippines (2) |
| Like group E but with short | ||
| Caribbean | Philippines (2) |
| Short thx, short | Cf. | Unknown |
| Caribbean | Philippines (3) |
| Short thx, long emergent part on | Cf. | Possibly confined to the Red Sea |
| Caribbean and Indian Ocean | Philippines (3); Kenya (1) |
| Long | Cf. | Possibly endemic to Samoan region |
| Indian Ocean | Kenya (2) |
| Long | ||
| Indian Ocean | Kenya (1) |
| Long | ||
| Indian Ocean | Kenya (1) |
| Short thx and | Cf. | Possibly confined to the Red Sea |
Taxonomic groupings (A–L) based on specimens from the Singapore, Philippines and Kenya supplied by TMC. Information listed includes the number of specimens in each group, their locality, defining morphological characters; thorax (Thx), dorsal lips (dl), radioles (rds), branchial crown (bc), crown web (wb), collar (c), thoracic chaetae (thx ch), abdominal chaetae (ab ch), ventral collar lappets (vcl) collar pockets (cp) and dorsal lobes (dlb), and a conclusion to which species from the genus the group is most closely suited with their known distribution (Knight-Jones and Mackie, 2003). Specimens from the Indo Pacific Ocean includes records from; Zanzibar, Mauritius, Sri Lanka, Burma, Indonesia, Philippines, Japan, Taiwan, Hawaii & Western and Northern Australia.
Figure 2The source of marine ornamental stock in UK retail stores.
Percentage of retailers across the UK; Scotland, Wales, the north, midlands and south of England and the UK mean, purchasing marine fan worms from TMC, KCC (a wholesaler based in Hull), importing directly themselves or a mixture of any of these (corresponding shading shown in legend). The number of retail stores that stock fan worms and answered this question is shown above the corresponding data bar.
The number of ornamental polychaetes sold in the UK and Germany each month.
| % of marine stores stocking polychaetes | Coco worms | Fan worms | |||||
| Stocked stores | Range of worm sales per month | Mean number sold per month | Stocked stores | Range of worm sales per month | Mean number sold per month | ||
| Scotland (3) | 100 | 1 | 30 | 30 | 2 | 40–100 | 70 |
| Wales (10) | 90 | 2 | 1–12 | 7 | 9 | 2–48 | 11 |
| North (9) | 56 | 1 | 3 | 3 | 4 | 3–10 | 7 |
| Midlands (9) | 79 | 2 | 2–4 | 3 | 7 | 4–50 | 14 |
| South (20) | 90 | 7 | 1–12 | 5 | 18 | 3–30 | 13 |
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| Germany | 50 | 16 | 1–10 | 3 | 19 | 1–70 | 10 |
The estimated range and mean number of coco worms and fan worms sold on a monthly basis in stores participating in the retail telephone survey across the UK; Scotland, Wales and the north, midlands and south of England and Germany. The percentage of retailers selling marine stock is present in brackets next to the corresponding region.