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Researchers register success in breeding Pacific blue tangs aka ‘Finding Dory’ fish

July 25, 2016 — You can call it ‘Finding Dory’ effect, as a rise has been witnessed in the sales of Pacific blue tang since the movie has been released. Blue tangs can only be captured in the wild. As per experts, the methods used for the same are environmentally harmful.

For past many years, researchers have been tried to replicate the species; mating, hatching and growing behavior. Researchers from the University of Florida have achieved success in the same and have been able to breed Pacific blue tangs.

The research was carried out by the university researchers along with Rising Tide Conservation and the SeaWorld-Busch Gardens Conservation Fund. The species is considered to be the most difficult fish. In fact, only 12.5 to 15% of aquarium creatures can be bred in captivity. It has now become vital to increase the percentage.

As mentioned above, only method to get them is from the wild. Blue tangs are not going to become extinct, as they reproduce in large number and live in reefs across the world. But reefs are what giving concerns to scientists.

Read the full story at NorcalNews

Scientists worried ‘Finding Dory’ will threaten fish species

May 17, 2016 — Pixar’s “Finding Dory,” out June 13, might literally take fish out of water.

Australian biologists fear that the regal blue tang — the Dory of the title, voiced by Ellen DeGeneres — may go the way of the clownfish after “Finding Nemo” came out in 2003.

Scientists say that when demand for the vibrant species skyrockets, the fish are often taken from the wild through harmful practices.

“In places like Southeast Asia, they use … cyanide,” Anita Nedosyko, a marine biologist, told the Brisbane Times. “It stuns the fish — it makes it easier to catch them.”

Read the full story at the New York Post

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