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Buying Nemo.


The popular animated movie Finding Nemo, a favorite in kids' video collections, traces the exploits of the young clownfish The clownfish, or anemonefish, are the subfamily Amphiprioninae of the family Pomacentridae. Currently 27 species exist, of which one is in the genus Premnas and the rest are in the subfamily's type genus Amphiprion.  Nemo, who is captured by divers and plopped into a dentist office aquarium. But Nemo longs to return to the ocean and his father. Overall, the movie's message seems simple: fish are unhappy trapped in tanks.

Yet did kids get the point? As clownfish sell out across the country the answer seems to be: not quite. Children want their own Nemo. "Every kid who walks by the tanks yells 'there's Nemo!'" explains Seattle PetCo store manager JoLyn Nightingale, who noticed a marked increase in clownfish sales since the movie.

Vince Rado, sales manager sales manager ngerente m/f de ventas

sales manager ndirecteur commercial

sales manager sale n
 of the tropical fish tropical fish

Any of various small fishes of tropical origin often kept in aquariums. They are interesting for their behaviour or showiness or both. Popular varieties include the angelfish, guppy, kissing gourami, sea horse, Siamese fighting fish, and tetra.
 hatchery hatchery

a commercial establishment dedicated to the hatching of bird eggs to provide day old chicks and poults to the poultry industry.


hatchery liquid
the contents of unfertilized eggs. Used in petfood manufacture.
 Oceans, Reefs and Aquariums (ORA) concludes, "Clownfish were popular before Finding Nemo, but the movie was icing on the cake." Rado--who describes fire ORA ora (o´rah) pl. o´rae   [L.] an edge or margin.

ora serra´ta re´tinae  the zigzag margin of the retina of the eye.
 as "the world's largest supplier of Nemos"--notes that marketing off the momentum of the movie also contributed to rising sales.

Although this clownfish-buying fad seems innocent, it poses real harm to tropical reef ecosystems--the natural home of Nemo and his friends. Though hatcheries such as ORA do not remove fish from coral reefs coral reefs, limestone formations produced by living organisms, found in shallow, tropical marine waters. In most reefs, the predominant organisms are stony corals, colonial cnidarians that secrete an exoskeleton of calcium carbonate (limestone). , other suppliers do. "Collectors sometimes use bleach and cyanide chemicals to stun fish," says Brain Huse, executive director of the Coral Reef Alliance The Coral Reef Alliance (CORAL) is a nonprofit organization based in San Francisco, CA that partners with local reef communities around the world to protect coral reefs. CORAL was founded in Berkeley, CA in 1994 by Stephan Colwell,[1] . "This causes permanent harm to reef communities."

Coral reef coral reef

Ridge or hummock formed in shallow ocean areas from the external skeletons of corals. The skeleton consists of calcium carbonate (CaCO3), or limestone. A coral reef may grow into a permanent coral island, or it may take one of four principal forms.
 ecosystems, already one of the most threatened environments on the planet, face significant challenges even without meeting the demands of Nemo-loving children. "We lost 15 to 30 percent of reefs in the last generation and we stand to lose up to 50 percent in the next 50 years," Huse explains. "We shouldn't be taking more pieces out for the aquarium trade."

Another risk of the Nemo craze is to the fish themselves. As salt-water species, clownfish are difficult to keep. "You can't just buy a fish and put it in a bowl," Nightingale warns. Instead, parents and children serious about maintaining a saltwater aquarium must invest time and money into the enterprise--and continue to care for the fish even after the Nemo hype has faded away.

A Disney movie sparking a pet fad is not new. David Helvarg, president of the Blue Frontier Campaign The Blue Frontier Campaign is a United States marine conservation activist organization founded by David Helvarg in 2003.

The Campaign has established a nationwide network of grassroots (the marine conservation community or Blue Movement calls this 'seaweed') lobbyists.
, compares the current interest in buying Nemo with the rush to purchase Dalmatian puppies after the release of 101 Dalmatians. Parents often gave the puppies away to pounds after realizing that raising a real puppy was not the same as watching one on screen. It is a distinction, Helvarg argues, that our mass-market culture too often misses. "People need to realize that enjoying a cartoon about a reef doesn't mean you should go and establish one in your living room," he says.

And for the more ecologically minded child who understood Nemo's message that fish long to be free? There is something they, too, should remember: don't flush your fish alive. For despite the movie's mantra, not all drains lead to the ocean. CONTACT: Blue Frontier, (202) 387-8030, www.bluefront.org; Coral Reef Alliance, (415)834-0900, www. coral.org.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Earth Action Network, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Osterhoudt, Sarah
Publication:E
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jul 1, 2004
Words:510
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