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Over 200 species of valuable ornamental fish live in the rivers of the Lower Guinean rainforest in Cameroon. The export trade for these fish largely benefits foreign businessmen, though, who keep up to 95 percent of profits. More sustainable approaches to trade are needed if local people are to benefit.
The trade in ornamental fish (fish kept for their beauty rather than for food) is dominated by ‘middlemen’. They keep the profits and their crude capture techniques result in an average fish mortality of 85 percent. Low quality products and unreliable services mean that aquarium fish from Cameroon have a poor reputation internationally. Many fish stocks are at the point of collapse and local people gain little from the industry.
The WorldFish Center in Cameroon, in partnership with the Organisation pour l’Environnement et le Développement Durable (a local non-governmental organisation), is working on an ongoing project with middlemen and fishers. The aim is to turn an inefficient, exploitative business into a profitable local enterprise that benefits local populations. This is done by improving the handling and transport of fishes for overseas markets, and renegotiating the distribution of profits.
The project is applying several principles:
There is a low natural abundance of fish in Lower Guinean Rainforest, and limited infrastructure. As a result, the trade in wild ornamental fish will not produce enough money on its own to sustain rural communities, or justify the responsible management of rainforests.
However, cultivating ornamental fish through aquaculture could form the basis of a sustainable and profitable rainforest river management project. This could provide alternative employment for young men and women, who might otherwise live by slash-and-burn agriculture or illegal logging, or be forced to migrate for work.
The key lessons from the project so far include:
Source(s):
‘Africa’s Age of Aquarium: Farming Ornamental Fish in the Rainforests of
West Africa to Improve Livelihoods of the Poor’, WorldFish Center Lessons
Learned 1706, The WorldFish Center: Penang, 2007 (PDF) Full document.
Funded by: This project has been funded at different stages by: WorldFish’s core investors, World Bank, UK Department for International Development, The National Geographic Society and also supported through fellowships from the Fulbright Foundation and the International Fund for Agricultural Research.
id21 Research Highlight: 27 April 2008
Further Information:
Randall Brummett
The WorldFish Center - Cameroon Office
Humid Forest Center
B.P. 2008 (Messa), Yaoundé
Cameroon
Tel:
+237 2237434 / 2237522
Fax:
+237 2237437
Contact the contributor: r.brummett@cgiar.org
The WorldFish Center - Cameroon Office
Other related links:
'Slipping through the net: can poor people benefit from the international
fisheries trade?'
'Tackling illegal fishing practices in Africa’s protected waters'
'Shrimp farming at the cross roads'