
The Blue Zoo Aquatics Tank-Raised Cuttlefish (Photo courtesy of Blue Zoo Aquatics and reproduced here with permission)

A Tank-Raised Blenny with Soon-to-Be Captive Bred Young at Sustainable Aquatics (Photo by Ret Talbot - All Rights Reserved)
Toward a Working Definition of Tank-Raised
While the issue has never entirely gone away, this past week saw a seismic resurgence in a semantic debate concerning two often misused and frequently abused terms in the marine aquarium industry: tank-raised and captive bred. These are terms that should have value for the aquarist contemplating a purchase, and despite the continued discussion, there are, at least based on my research and reporting, good working definitions for both terms to which people at all levels of the trade should be held accountable. This Week’s Debate and Blue Zoo Aquatics Tank-Raised Cuttlefish The most recent iteration of the debate began when Blue Zoo Aquatics, a Los Angeles-based online retailer of marine aquarium livestock and dry goods, posted a What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get (WYSIWYG) tank-raised cuttlefish for sale in their Collector’s Choice store. Collector’s Choice is the portion of the Blue Zoo Aquatics website where they sell unique, rare or otherwise distinctive animals. Soon after Blue Zoo Aquatics posted the WYSIWYG tank-raised cuttlefish, aquarists began to talk via social media. Excitement, speculation and assumptions dominated that chatter. Some aquarists, wary from previous abuses of the term “tank-raised,” questioned how legitimate the label was. Others, with a less clear definition in mind for tank-raised, expressed a range of emotions from enthusiasm to dismay based on their own interpretation of the term. A subsequent blog entry published by Aquanerd, a saltwater aquarist blog, drove the discussion into high gear when it conjectured that the animal was “maybe even captive bred,” a claim Blue Zoo Aquatics never made. Baffled by the Debate over the Tank-Raised Cuttlefish When I interviewed Blue Zoo Aquatics’ Mark Martin about the animal and the ensuing online discussion, he initially seemed baffled. When I directed Martin to the various Facebook threads and other online discussion about the cuttlefish (some approaching 200 comments as of this writing), he shook his head, saying, “I’m not sure where the confusion came from. We offered a tank-raised, not a captive-bred, cuttlefish for sale. End of story.” For the full story on the origins of this cuttlefish, see Blue Zoo Aquatics own article on the subject. For Martin it was simple because Blue Zoo Aquatics has gone on the record on several occasions clearly defining what they mean when they say tank-raised. In large part, their definition stems from the definition used by the company from which they source many of their tank-raised animals—more on that in a bit. Defining Tank-Raised So how does Blue Zoo Aquatics define tank-raised? In a March 2011 issue of Blue Zoo News, Blue Zoo Aquatics enewsletter, tank-raised was defined in an article titled “Tank-Raised Fishes from Solomon.”
![]() The Blue Zoo Aquatics Tank-Raised Cuttlefish (Photo courtesy of Blue Zoo Aquatics and reproduced here with permission) ![]() A Tank-Raised Blenny with Soon-to-Be Captive Bred Young at Sustainable Aquatics (Photo by Ret Talbot - All Rights Reserved)
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Nice job!
In defense of the AquaNerd Blog, it was never stated that the cuttlefish were captive bred. We referred to them as tank raised throughout the entire article. We did use the phrase “maybe even captive bred”, but only as a jumping off point to explain how few captive bred cuttlefish there are commercially available to aquarium hobbyists and how exciting it would be if they were captive bred.