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The International Marine Aquarium Conference - 2007
Martin Moe, Jr.
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You know why bios are written in the third person? It's a lot easier to write about yourself when you can pretend some else is doing the writing. So, not being one to defy convention, I will write about Martin Moe as if he were someone else, but I'll try to be honest. Martin just turned 65 and is now on the cusp of senior citizenship. He's been working with marine life in one way or another for the last 45 years. He's not the sharpest tool in the shed, but he works hard, and he's lucky. Not lucky in the "win the lotto" sense, but lucky in the conduct of life. This consists of knowing, as much as possible, who you are, always moving in the direction of your interests and abilities, and mostly, pursuing, recognizing, and accepting opportunities and responsibilities that carry you in this direction.
You also have to respect others, always deliver more than the contract specifies, and inspire others to do the same, but that's not luck, that's just part of who you are. If he had gone with the flow, instead of pursuing his interests, he could very well have spent his life running a hobby shop, selling life insurance, being a lifeguard, teaching middle school, or even delivering donuts, all respectable occupations, but not fulfilling the ambitions and aspirations of his youth. |
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Martin has a masters degree in marine biology, and has worked as lifeguard, a teacher, a fishery biologist, a marine fish breeder, and a writer. He began breeding marine fish, pompano, in 1969 and then developed the techniques for breeding clownfish in 1972. He started Aqualife Research in 1973 with clownfish and goby culture and then moved the company to the Florida Keys in 1975. There, the company continued to breed clownfish and other species, but concentrated on developing a method for breeding the large Atlantic angelfish, the French and the gray. This effort was biologically but not economically successful. The company moved to Walker's Cay in the Bahamas in the mid 1980s and concentrated on commercial clownfish culture. Martin became a bit "burned out" with running a fish hatchery and in the late 80s, and turned to writing and publishing books with his wife Barbara. Barbara was very good for Martin. They met in 1959 over a cup of coffee; she married him, put him through school, had three kids, edited and published their books, and generally kept the whole show on the road.
He wrote The Marine Aquarium Handbook , first edition published in 1982, which was very influential in the development of the marine aquarium hobby. The Marine Aquarium Reference followed in 1989 and since then he and Barbara have published a comprehensive book on spiny lobsters, a book on Breeding the Orchid Dottyback , and The Marine Aquarists' Quiz Book . The new edition of the Reference will update everything in the previous editions and include much more basic data and information on captive marine systems. Martin and Barbara now live in old house on the beach in Islamorada in the Florida Keys. The last three years have been a whirlwind of moving, working on the old house, trying to write, and of course, working with marine life and the fragile coral reef environment of the Florida Keys. A current project is working with the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary to restore the keystone herbivore, the long spined sea urchin, Diadema antillarum , to the reefs of the Keys.
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Martin is pictured here with his wife Barbara
ABSTRACT
"Construction and initial rearing projects from a marine culture hatchery in the Florida Keys (Back in the saddle again…… ) "
What is it about marine aquaculture that drives an otherwise sensible, responsible, intelligent, and compassionate person to ride the wild horse of marine fish culture again, and again, and again? To eschew the easy life, a life of retirement, recreation, travel, and the various pleasures that are collectable after a lifetime of stress and hard work?
Well, I don't know, but here we go again. We started constructing the lab in the summer of 2005, and in a year filled with dodging hurricanes and visiting Home Depot every week, we constructed a marine culture laboratory of 26 inside tanks ranging from 8 to 150 gallons and outside culture facility of 5 150 gallon tanks and 4 algae culture tubes, among other things…. The major project of our little culture facility is rearing Diadema sea urchins but we also reared a spawn of yellowhead jawfish, a project that was on the drawing board for, oh, 25 years or so…..
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