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Joy&RaptorsUnrestrained!
01-15-2014, 04:05 PM
Hey guys, I'm usually among the least eco-friendly of the merfolk on here. It's not that I have anything against the environment, but I am a sensualist/hedonist, and I'm lazy and I do things like turning the lights off when I'm not in the room, etc, but after attempting to get a college degree in Environmental Resource Management and being burned out by the chemistry grade requirements (as well as being severely prone to poison ivy, sun poisoning, and mosquito bites), I try to leave nature alone.

I did, however, drop into my favorite pet store from when I was a kid to look at the fish. This shop has provided me with some of my favorite sea creature pets, including chocolate chip stars, serpent stars, seahorses, guppies, and more. While wandering through the store, I spotted a tank full of transparent fish with vivid, brightly colored stripes on their sides. They were dazzling, and I saw that they were referred to as Painted Glass Fish. I made a note on my phone to look them up when I got home... but when I did, I was severely disappointed.

While the transparent bodies of the fish are natural, those stripes are not. In order to sell them to aquarium enthusiasts who are drawn to bright colors, fish breeders inject these "disco fish" with dyes that 1. fade over a couple months, 2. hurts and traumatizes the fish, and 3. can lead to infections and diseases that drastically reduce the fish' four year lifespan.

I felt supremely guilty for even considering buying those fish, guilty for thinking they'd make cool tail designs, guilty for admiring the stripes themselves. I felt disappointed, as if someone had told me that peacock feathers were all painted or tigers were actually just mountain lions that had been dyed or that someone went around gluing unicorn horns on narwhals. And I felt betrayed by a store that I used to love and that gave me some of my favorite pets as a kid. As someone who usually isn't very eco-focused, I was unprepared for the emotional reaction to this treatment of fish. I was likewise appalled to find out that while glass fish are naturally transparent, several other fish species are dyed or injected this way to give them unnatural patterns, and almost all of those ones are (by necessity) albinos to begin with. I did find that some "painted fish" can gain their color from foods with natural dyes in them, like the pink shade that flamingos gain from eating shrimp, but it seemed like the majority of these painted fish instead suffer invasive and harmful dyeing methods instead. Does anyone know more about this phenomenon or advice on how to find more healthily painted fish?

Dee Tal
01-15-2014, 04:28 PM
I, myself, was also surprised when I found out about these. The concept sounds like something you'd find in a street market in Asia so them being sold in the USA was especially shocking.

Echinacea
01-15-2014, 06:49 PM
I've always liked these fish - Neon Tetras. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neon_tetra

I remember a friend in grade school having an aquarium with some of these bright little fishies in it, and they have fascinated me to this day! Such a bright blue stripe!

Echidna
01-15-2014, 07:13 PM
Erm, ye, but Tetras are naturally coloured that way.
As are most tropical fish, large or small.

I've never heard of the painting method before, I'm appalled something like this is practised :/
Quite certain though it's forbidden in Europe, I've also never seen such a fish in any store hereabouts.

Joy&RaptorsUnrestrained!
01-15-2014, 07:27 PM
I haven't been able to find anything about European bans on painted fish, caltuna, though you might find this wikipedia quote interesting regarding the U.K.:

"Some members of the aquarium trade want to ban this practice. For example, the British publication Practical Fishkeeping (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Practical_Fishkeeping) started a campaign in 1996 to ask retailers to stop selling dyed fish, which led to a significant decrease in the number sold in the United Kingdom (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom). Practical Fishkeeping has launched a similar campaign with a global scope and maintains a register of stores which do not stock dyed fish.[9] (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Painted_fish#cite_note-9) The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Society_for_the_Prevention_of_Cruelty_to_Ani mals) (RSPCA) regards the practice as cruel and unnecessary cosmetic mutilation (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutilation). A campaign in Australia and in the UK has limited the sale of these fish. Dyed fish are still available and are generally imported from Southeast Asia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southeast_Asia).

In February 2006, the UK's Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Department_for_Environment,_Food_and_Rural_Affairs ) (Defra) confirmed that it would not be making it illegal to sell dyed fish in the UK under the Animal Welfare Bill."

Mermaid Dottie
01-15-2014, 07:31 PM
OUCH!
This hurts me. Is there no end to humanity's uncaring mutilation of precious life for their own amusement?

Miyu
01-15-2014, 11:31 PM
I found a site with a bunch of info on "painted" fish, including reputable dealers as well as a list of "painted" fish so you can keep an eye out and not buy them :( : http://www.deathbydyeing.org/colormedead.htm
(http://www.deathbydyeing.org/colormedead.htm)
Poor fishies...

I read somewhere online someone said that the dealer had never mentioned anything to her or her mom about them being injected... WELL OF COURSE NOT, you won't want to buy it if you know it's been injected with a toxic dye that will fade in a few months anyways!

Aziara
01-16-2014, 02:03 AM
I had a fish like this when I was a kid. When I bought the fish, I thought the coloring was natural. After a while, the color started to chip and peel off.... Turns out it was PAINT!! I was so pissed that someone had painted the poor fish, and also that the pet store had told me that the color was real. The fish seemed a lot happier and healthier once the paint wore off completely. He was much more active. I can't believe people are still doing this...

tealmermaid
01-16-2014, 06:22 PM
A lot of pet stores around here sell those, or those Glofish that are injected with glow-in-the-dark dyes. It's horrible, and it shortens the lifespan of the fish. Poor fishies.

I'll stick to normal-colour tropicals, thank you.

Echidna
01-16-2014, 06:58 PM
The Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Society_for_the_Prevention_of_Cruelty_to_Ani mals) (RSPCA) regards the practice as cruel and unnecessary cosmetic mutilation (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutilation). A campaign in Australia and in the UK has limited the sale of these fish. Dyed fish are still available and are generally imported from Southeast Asia (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Southeast_Asia).


Read about it and found many sites of aquarists discussing the problem.
Apparently, the painting process itself is banned in Europe, the importing and sale of the fish themselves however is not. :doh:

They're not called painted fish in Germany either, they invent all sorts of names to deceive the potential buyers
("disco-perch", "neon-perch", "parrot-fish", and so on).

That's the hypocriticalness of European law right there-
torture, mutilation etc of animals is forbidden, but it doesn't extend to anything but "cute" pets and mammals apparently.

No surprise though.
Our food, drinking water and clothes are all made with poisonous materials, which is then sold under fancy names so us dumb consumers won't catch on.
If people are unscrupulous enough to do this to their own species just to make a few bucks, imagine how much less they'd care about harming an animal.

BayouMermaid
01-16-2014, 07:48 PM
I am so glad that the pet store that I work at refuses to sell painted, dyed, or tattooed fish. We do sell the Glo-fish, but they are born with their colors as they are genetically modified. They have the genes of sea anemones added to produce fluorescence. They won't glow in the dark, but they will glow under a black light. I also like that they keep their colors all their life.

BayouMermaid
01-16-2014, 07:56 PM
Here's some more info about glofish. http://www.fishchannel.com/glofish.aspx

ShyMer
01-17-2014, 10:35 AM
Aww man, I didn't know this was a thing. I hate that!

Mermaid Adriel
01-20-2014, 07:35 AM
Aww man, I didn't know this was a thing. I hate that!

me neither. let's boycott this cruelty!

Joy&RaptorsUnrestrained!
01-24-2014, 04:08 PM
Thanks for the info about glofish, BayouMermaid! If I do get back to having an aquarium, I might check them out, and it's nice to know that there are some healthy alternatives to "painted" fish.

That said, I might also be interested in having an unpainted, healthy glass fish... their transparent bodies are cool all on their own, without needing dyed stripes.

Miyu
02-02-2014, 03:05 PM
Raptor, that's what I thought when I saw them... Little clear fishies! How cute! Why on earth would anyone want to paint them?!? :O_o:

Aziara
02-02-2014, 03:17 PM
Good luck finding unpainted glass fish.... I've never been able to find them before. I don't see why... Only a few weeks ago I saw some painted ones at the local aquarium and fish store :anger explode: