Nature

Amazonian dragon fish star in Chinese aquariums

Chinese demand for ornamental fish has opened a niche in Colombia’s Amazon that could curb deforestation

Dressed in rubber overalls, Óscar Timarán launches himself into a rectangular pond and paces the perimeter with a black net. With water up to his waist, he and a colleague isolate a corner where dozens of long greyish fish can be seen fluttering furiously, trying to escape.

One by one, Oscar inspects them. He lifts a half-metre fish by the tail, tilts its head down and gently brushes its mouth. The jaw opens and a cascade of small black and orange specks flies towards a plastic bag of water.

They are the babies of the silver arowana. Native to the Amazon, the fish has an elegant swimming style and is a new attraction in China’s aquariums owing to its resemblance to the dragon fish (Asian arowana), the most expensive decorative fish in the world.

In exporting the ornamental fish to Asia, breeders in the Amazonian department of Caquetá have discovered an economic niche that could help stop deforestation in the world’s largest continuous forest.

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In Caquetá, Carlos Eduardo Ramírez and the Amazon International Trade Zone (AITZ) have 48 ponds with arowanas. Photo: Andrés Bermúdez Liévano.

Amazonian dragon in China

At the foot of wooded hills outside the departmental capital of Florencia, in paddocks where cows once grazed, the Amazon International Trade Zone company (AITZ) breeds silver arowana in 48 pools. It is fast becoming a promising business.

“There were 15 years of scientific research, publications and manuals, but we saw that there was no major commercial initiative,” says manager Carlos Eduardo Ramírez, who has promoted their venture in several trade fairs in Asia, including the China International Pet Show (CIPS) in Beijing and Aquarama in Singapore.

 

“We were one of the leaders,” adds Ramírez, who ditched a career as a banking analyst in Bogotá to return to his native region and lead the new aquaculture ‘biotrade’.

In 2013, they exported their first shipment of 3,000 baby arowanas to a dealer in Hong Kong. Every year since they’ve sent around 20,000 two-centimetre fingerlings that are then raised by distributors. When they reach the size of a hand, they are sold to aquarists throughout China.

In the last decade, they have become popular as an affordable substitute to the coveted Asian arowana. According to Emily Voigt’s book The Dragon Behind the Glass, the Asian version can fetch several thousand dollars and need armed guards.

"You see them in the water and you don’t see anything too different, but look at them in an aquarium and you can see the beautiful colours", says Hermes Olmos, an arowana farmer from the town of Paujil.

While a young Asian arowana can cost between US$50 and $100, its Amazon cousin, also called the ‘silver dragon fish’ (银龙 in Chinese), is sold fully grown for 100 yuan ($15) on e-commerce websites like Jingdong.

Like their reddish cousin, the silver arowana evokes the dragons of Asian folklore with large, shiny scales, a wavy swimming pattern and two small whiskers, or olfactory bulbs, that hang from the lip.

“You see them in the water and you don’t see anything too different, but look at them in an aquarium and you can see the beautiful colours,” says Hermes Olmos, a rural farmer from the town of Paujil who was among the first breeders.

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The Asian dragon fish has been nicknamed in the Amazon as the "monkey fish" for its agility, speed and ability to jump Photo: Andrés Bermúdez Liévano.

Gladys Pineda, manager of the Caquetá Aquaculture Association (Acuica), which represents 100 fish farmers, says: “China is the star market. While we don't have a culture of aquariums here, over there they really like them and we are amazed to see the technology they use.”

Acuica decided 17 years ago to investigate the market potential of arowana and study how to reproduce the species in captivity. Until then, there was only an informal and ill-concealed trade in fish captured in the rivers in the Amazon. After three years, they patented the method and raised them along with fifty partners.

Yet the initial boom didn’t last long. In all the enthusiasm for the new business, many fish died during the 40-hour plane journey, as farmers overlooked crucial factors such as water temperature. They also struggled with distributors.

The silver variety is not the only arowana to light up Chinese aquariums. There is a ‘blue’ species, which is rife in the flood forests of the Amazon basin but which reproduces poorly in captivity and is more sensitive to changes in water temperature.

Since 2015, AITZ has also exported baby arapaima, which grows into the largest fish in the Amazon. They can measure two metres in captivity and three in the wild. Their white, tasty meat means they’re mostly sold for gastronomy, but Peru is seeing growing demand from Chinese ornamental fish fanatics.

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At 45 days old - like those shown here by Duván Avilés - the fish are exported in bags attached to oxygen pipes Photo: Andrés Bermúdez Liévano.

Fish against deforestation

The sale of arowanas to China has another benefit. Caquetá, where the forests of the Andes mountain range meet the jungles of the Amazon, has among the highest rates of deforestation in Colombia. Extensive cattle ranching and land speculation are largely to blame.

In a region that saw 60,000 hectares of forest cut in 2018 and where conventional wisdom dictates that each cow needs one hectare to graze, stopping deforestation means finding productive solutions for thousands of farmers. The conversion to silvopastoral, more forest friendly, methods in the jungle's border area is also a challenge.

Colombia’s biotrade is emerging as one possible solution for conservation. Products range from Amazonian fruits açai and cupuaçu, to the community management of forests – and breeding arowanas.

“Livestock in the Amazon needs very large areas because the soil is not suitable. In contrast, aquaculture has fast and important returns in generating economic stability,” said Luz Maria Mantilla, director of the Sinchi Amazonian Institute of Scientific Research, a government body.

“It’s a relatively recent business in the Amazon because many researchers thought it was competing with the river. When we found that the species was beginning to decline, we were convinced that it was a good option,” adds Mantilla, who grew up in Caquetá.

For all of them, the model is proving to be more profitable and sustainable than livestock farming. It also requires less land.

Hermes Olmos has 14 lagoons with 800 breeding stocks. He produced 16,000 small fish last year in just one and a half hectares.

“You can’t imagine that artisanal fish is so big a market. It’s very profitable,” says Olmos. “I am taking on average 100 larvae per fish, which are sold at 2,000 pesos (US$0.60) each and have few expenses. Last year they returned an 80% profit.” A decade ago he made a living raising edible fish like mojarra, cachama and shad.

Unsurprisingly, Olmos says he’s going to stick with arowana.

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Óscar Timarán brushes the throat of the fish, feeling for the eggs. The record number in one instance is 220 fish eggs. Photo: Andrés Bermúdez Liévano.

Ramírez’s 10-hectare farm, which has over 1,000 males for breeding, generates six permanent jobs and at least four temporary ones. They have also decided to preserve 180 hectares of forest. AITZ bought its farm from the Colombian Government after the corrupt Caquetá Cattle Fund went bankrupt.

Overfishing fears

Voigt says the sheer scale of Chinese demand raises several environmental concerns. The success of the trade quickly led to overfishing in the Amazon’s rivers as those keen to profit ignored the seasonal windows necessary for the fish to reproduce and so stabilise numbers.

Southeast Asia serves as a warning. Its ornamental fish trade is booming, but the habitats of these farmed species are being wiped out

A contraband trade emanating from Brazil flourished, driven by a demand that one Chinese importer who Voigt talked to estimated at around one million arowanas a year.

“Yet farming pet fish rather than collecting them from the wild can remove an important incentive to protect nature. Southeast Asia is a cautionary tale: its ornamental fish trade is booming but the habitats of the species being bred are largely destroyed,” Voigt told Diálogo Chino. She added that she had even met Asian aquaculturists already raising the Amazonian species.

South American farmers fear that eliminating the costs of transporting to markets 17,000 kilometres away would mean they couldn’t compete.

For Caquetá, such opportunities are vital. It is one of the most biodiverse departments in the country and was for years a stronghold of the Farc Marxist guerrillas. After they signed an historic peace agreement with the government in 2016, 13,000 guerrillas put down their weapons and began looking for work.

With a virtually non-existent private sector and 11,793 hectares, or 7% of Colombia’s territory, devoted to the cultivation of coca, the region is looking for ways of growing economically whilst preserving its natural wealth.

One way could well be this elegant, elongated fish which uses its mouth as an incubator.