| ARTICLE INFORMATION: Author: Dr. Adrian Lawler Title: Aquarium Management Summary: Want to know what is involved in being the curator of an aquarium? Do you have what it takes to be one? Read on to find the answers! Contact for editing purposes: email: Adrian Lawler <alawler@hotmail.com> Date first published: July 2007 Publication: Reprinted from Aquarticles: |
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Aquarium Management Original to Aquarticles There are numerous books on "how to" take care of tanks. This short article is thus not intended to cover all aspects of all subjects pertaining to aquarium management. Book knowledge has value, but first-hand experience has far greater value (the difference being "reading how" vs. "experiencing and knowing how"). Observational savvy, i.e., constantly being observant for things wrong plus hands-on experience will solve most problems encountered (see article on tank checks). There can be many correct pathways to arrive at the same result in running an aquarium (i.e., there may be different procedures but all can be correct) but we must strive to pick the procedural pathway that is the most efficient, quickest, and least costly. Only hands-on experience with the tanks in question and the organisms involved can give one the best procedures, and some of these methods may not be in the published literature. There is also no "Final" manual on aquarium management procedures; there should be constant technique improvements and incorporation of new findings. Details concerning each aspect of aquarium management can be found in numerous texts, and in other articles by me and others at Aquarticles.com, and at other sites and books. Aquarium management requires knowing enough about many subjects (Aquaculture to Zoology) in order to do all aspects of an aquarium operation, plus practicing constant diligence, constant observation, and constant work. As we are dealing with living organisms held under unnatural conditions we can expect some failures (no doctor saves all human patients). Our goal is to learn from any failures so we can become more proficient and efficient. Levels of aquarium management will vary from managing one tank as a hobby to managing many tanks in a pet store, public aquarium, theme park, laboratory, etc. For a public aquarium it is all about keeping the organisms alive and in a healthy state in pleasing displays that hopefully educate and please the public. For a laboratory it is about keeping the organisms in a healthy state so they can be used for various experiments. Aquarium management is a never-ending job and a constant struggle to keep things running correctly. A public aquarium should not be under the control of a building administrator, but one knowledgeable about aquariums. It is bad management to make someone responsible for an aquarium, but then have someone else (usually with little or no knowledge of aquarium management) have final authority. The outline below indicates the more important aspects of study for aquarium management in order to result in maintaining healthy specimens for display, or experimental use. AQUARIUM MANAGEMENT (short outline) EDUCATION NEEDED Some courses that may be required or suggested (will vary depending on school attended, degree sought, and interests of student and his advisor): Aquaculture, Animal behavior, Chemistry, Chordate anatomy, Computer science, Biology, Botany, Ecology, Embryology, Environmental Science, Fisheries management, Genetics, Herpetology, Ichthyology, Invertebrate zoology, Immunology, Limnology, Marine biology, Marine technical methods, Microbiology, Nutrition, Organic Chemistry, Parasitology, Physical Oceanography, Physics, Physiology, Planktology, Population Dynamics, Statistics, Taxonomy, Toxicology, Zoogeography, Zoology, and other courses deemed necessary. RESPONSIBILITIES PERSONALITY (some character traits for those who would manage
aquariums) CAREER OPTIONS See these articles also: Aquarist Interest http://www.aquarticles.com/articles/literature/Lawler_Interest_Tree.html Tank checks . http://www.aquarticles.com/articles/management/Lawler_Daily_Tank_Checks.html And most of my other articles. Copyright 2007 by Dr. Adrian Lawler, Author Copyright 2007 by Aquarticles, Internet Sponsor Author Information must remain with article. |