businesslamb
New Member
I was watching the latest David Attenborough nature series on TV last night, life in cold blood about reptiles and amphibians and of course as you would expect it was superb but it got me thinking.
They have covered the life of mammals, birds, plants and now reptiles and amphibians as well as life in the sea (blue planet) but very little on freshwater fish, Indeed the they only programme to mention fish is an episode of planet earth (freshwater) and even then it seemed to cover little on fish. Apart from the obligatory piranhas.
Why is this? I’m sure everyone on the site would agree that fish are fascinating there is a huge range of colour, size and shape (neons, killifish, giant catfish, discus), interesting breeding behaviour (diverse parental care, livebearers) , a stunning array of feeding practices (eye biters!) So why don’t we see this on TV. It can hardly be a logistical problem as there was film of mating crocs last night which is surely about a difficult as it gets (not to mention the underwater work in the blue planet) and you could always set up some biotope aquariums to film behaviour (don’t believe all you see on TV it is done regularly for small creatures).
I can only put it down to the fact that tropical fish are well known “pets” so aren’t seen as particularly worth the effort, why film cardinals in the Amazon if you can see them in your living room. Perhaps I shall write to the BBC and suggest they cover freshwater fish sometime.
Cheers
Businesslamb
They have covered the life of mammals, birds, plants and now reptiles and amphibians as well as life in the sea (blue planet) but very little on freshwater fish, Indeed the they only programme to mention fish is an episode of planet earth (freshwater) and even then it seemed to cover little on fish. Apart from the obligatory piranhas.
Why is this? I’m sure everyone on the site would agree that fish are fascinating there is a huge range of colour, size and shape (neons, killifish, giant catfish, discus), interesting breeding behaviour (diverse parental care, livebearers) , a stunning array of feeding practices (eye biters!) So why don’t we see this on TV. It can hardly be a logistical problem as there was film of mating crocs last night which is surely about a difficult as it gets (not to mention the underwater work in the blue planet) and you could always set up some biotope aquariums to film behaviour (don’t believe all you see on TV it is done regularly for small creatures).
I can only put it down to the fact that tropical fish are well known “pets” so aren’t seen as particularly worth the effort, why film cardinals in the Amazon if you can see them in your living room. Perhaps I shall write to the BBC and suggest they cover freshwater fish sometime.
Cheers
Businesslamb