|
Speakers
The following
individuals have accepted invitations to speak at MACNA XIX
More speakers are being added all the time, so please check back!

Dr.
Gerald R. Allen |
Gerry Allen is an
internationally renowned authority on the classification and
ecology of coral reef fishes of the Indo-Pacific region. He
is definitely “old school”, in his approach to science,
spending more time in the field than behind a desk looking
through a microscope.
Over a career spanning 40 years, he has
accumulated more than 12 years on various expeditions to all
the world’s tropical seas and has logged more than 8,000
hours of scuba diving. Dr. Allen has authored 33 books and
more than 400 scientific publications. He received a PhD in
marine zoology from the University of Hawaii in 1971,
studying the classification and biology of anemonefishes as
the subject of his thesis. The lure of Australia’s rich, but
poorly documented fish fauna attracted Gerry and his wife
Connie to Sydney in 1972 and two years later they moved to
Perth on the Indian Ocean coast, where they still reside.
Dr. Allen served as Curator of Fishes at the Western
Australian Museum for 25 years, retiring in 1998. He now
works as a full time consultant for Conservation
International, conducting marine biological surveys,
primarily in Southeast Asia. He still maintains a rigorous
research program and is also an avid underwater
photographer. He lists mountaineering, rock climbing,
bicycle racing and bird watching as his favourite hobbies.
Dr. Allen is a past President of the Australian Society for
Fish Biology, an honorary foreign member of the American
Society of Ichthyology and Herpetology, and a recent
recipient of the prestigious K. Radway Allen Award for
Outstanding Contributions to Australian Ichthyological
Science. |
|
Adam Blundell |
Adam
Blundell M.S. works in Marine Ecology, and in Pathology for
the University of Utah. He is also Director of The Aquatic &
Terrestrial Research Team, a group which utilizes research
projects to bring together hobbyists and scientists. His
vision is to see this type of collaboration lead to further
advancements in aquarium husbandry. While not in the lab he
is the president of one of the Nation's largest hobbyist
clubs, the Wasatch Marine Aquarium Society (
www.utahreefs.com ). Adam
has earned a BS in Marine Biology and an MS in the Natural
Resource and Health fields. |
 Eric Borneman
|
Eric Borneman is a Ph.D.
candidate supported by an NSF fellowship in the Department
of Biology and Biochemistry at the University of Houston.
Eric’s primary research area is in the field of apoptosis
and stress-related factors in coral disease. Eric received
the "Aquarist of the Year" award by the Marine Aquarium
Societies of North America in 2002 for contributions to the
field of coral husbandry, and has written two books on the
subject, including the acclaimed book, Aquarium Corals. Eric
is also involved in aquarium trade sustainability issues,
sexual and asexual coral culture for research, diseases and
reproduction in captive corals, and is currently conducting
coral disease research at the Texas Flower Garden Banks. He
hosts The Coral Forum, an advanced coral husbandry forum on
Reef Central and is a science editor of ReefKeeping
magazine. Eric has contributed hundreds of articles to both
the scientific and the international reefkeeping communities
and has lectured worldwide on the subject of coral
husbandry. He has been diving and photographing coral reefs
around the world since 1978.
|

Anthony Calfo |
"Reef Toxicology" (or in other
words, "Don't Put That In Your Mouth.")
This presentation examines reef
organisms with an eye upon two most fundamental categories: 1)
things you can eat, and 2) things you cannot eat. Good humor
and jokes aside (but included in good measure!), we will
explore the increasing awareness that aquarists have about
noxious, poisonous or toxic organisms in another pair
of equally practical categories: 1) things you can touch, and
2) don't even think of touching that! We will review
interesting creatures on the reef, including some of the most
fascinating, if not bizarre species feared, eaten or otherwise
used by coastal peoples. And overall, we will consider the
dangerous elements (intrinsic and exudate) that some reef
organisms produce and how that relates to issues of handling
and stocking them in aquaria.
|
| Dr.
Bruce Carlson
|
Bruce is a native of the state of Michigan where he enjoyed
studying the aquatic life in the stream behind his house. In
1971 he received his Bachelor of Science degree from the
University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. After graduating, he
traveled to Guyana, South America, where he worked as a
research assistant studying the reproductive biology of
freshwater fishes.
A year later, in 1972, he joined the Peace Corps and was
assigned to the University of the South Pacific in Suva,
Fiji. His task was to conduct a biological survey of the
marine life of the Fiji Islands and help establish a
permanent collection for the University. Nearly 30 years
later, the University has created a new museum to house this
collection, which has become very important for marine
studies in Fiji.
In 1975, Bruce moved to Hawaii where he earned a PhD at the
University of Hawaii. Six months after moving to Hawaii, he
started work at the Waikiki Aquarium in 1976 as a student
helper. As an aquarist, he initiated a series of new
exhibits which were “firsts” in the United States, including
chambered nautilus in 1976, cuttlefish in 1977, and living
corals and giant clams in 1978. His research on nautilus
eventually led to a successful breeding program for these
“living fossils” and in 1991 the American Zoo and Aquarium
Association awarded the prestigious “Bean Award” to the
Waikiki Aquarium in recognition of this work.
Bruce was appointed Director of the Waikiki Aquarium in
1990. In 1992, he began work on a $3 million renovation of
the old Aquarium. The Waikiki Aquarium is now considered one
of the finest “small” aquariums in the world. It is also the
third oldest aquarium in the nation and celebrated its 100th
anniversary on March 19, 2004. Under his Direction, the
Aquarium operated on a budget of about $2.5 million annually
and employed 38 full time staff assisted by more than 200
trained volunteers from the community.
In 2002, after 26 years working at the Waikiki Aquarium,
Bruce joined the Georgia Aquarium project in Atlanta where
he now serves as the Vice President for Life Sciences. He is
responsible for all of the new exhibits and research
programs for this $200 million facility scheduled for
opening in 2005.
Bruce is an avid scuba diver and underwater photographer,
and in recent years has taken up underwater videography. He
has published numerous scientific articles ranging from
descriptions of new species of reef fishes, to telemetry
work on chambered nautilus, to culture methods for corals in
aquariums. |

Dr. Stan Dannemiller |
Stan Dannemiller
is the Director of the animal research facility and laboratory
animal veterinarian at The Cleveland Clinic. He earned
graduate degrees in Zoology / Comparative Physiology from The
Ohio State University and in Toxicology from the University of
Pennsylvania. Stan is a proud member of the Cleveland
Saltwater Enthusiasts Association (C-SEA) for the last 5
years, and looks forward to meeting new people and learning
lots of new information at MACNA XIX. |

James Fatherree |
James
Fatherree has been an aquarium hobbyist since childhood, has
been keeping marine aquariums for over 15 years, and has spent
many days diving in Florida, Hawaii, the Bahamas, Japan and
Indonesia. He also managed a large retail aquarium store,
owned and operated an aquarium design, installation, and
maintenance business for several years, and spent a summer
working as a diver/collector/slave for an aquarium livestock
wholesaler in Florida. James has also published well over 100
articles and 1,000 photographs in various aquarium magazines
in the U.S. and Europe, and has written and illustrated
several books on the topics of reef organisms and marine
aquariums, the latest of which is Giant Clams in the Sea
and the Aquarium.
If you'd
like to know more about the author, visit his homepage at
www.fatherree.com/james. |

Lee Goldman |
Lee grew up in
Philadelphia, but realized he was spatially challenged when
a SCUBA diving trip to Bonaire, N.A. opened his eyes to the
natural beauty of the ocean. Within months of his return
from the warm Caribbean waters he left to pursue his dream
of working as a marine biologist for the beautiful and…cold
waters of the Pacific Northwest. There he earned a degree in
Marine Biology from Western Washington University. He has
since traveled the world working as a biologist and
naturalist in places such as Belize, Florida Keys, Vancouver
Island B.C., Palau, Philippines, and Guam. In 2003 he was
accepted into the Masters Degree program at the University
of Guam where he investigated coral interactions and
developed new techniques for culturing corals from sexually
produced larvae. As a result of his successful endeavors, he
started Coral Farm Guam, a company dedicated to conducting
research on growing and supplying corals for the aquarium
trade, research institutions and reef restoration projects.
Lee has published articles about his work for aquarium
hobbyist magazines and has been invited to speak at a
variety of aquaculture and marine aquarium conferences. He
is also a consultant and contributor for Dreamtime
Publishing, a company that produces guidebooks on SCUBA
diving and snorkeling destinations such as the Philippines
and Micronesia. Since completing his Master degree in marine
biology, he can be found conducting research on the
husbandry of juvenile corals at the Guam Aquaculture and
Development Center at the University of Guam. If not found
carrying out research on corals, he can surely be found
introducing his little girl to all of the wonderful
organisms that inhabit the local waters.
ABSTRACT
My talk will
focus on two important experiments to advance the knowledge
of coral aquaculture. The first experiment revolves around
refining techniques for growing corals from larvae. At MACNA
XVIII, I introduced the concept of growing coral from
sexually produced larvae as a way to supply corals for the
aquarium trade without harvesting existing colonies from the
reef. In this experiment, I examined the cost-benefit of
using live food (Artemia fanciscana) versus
artificial food (Golden Pearls©) on the growth of
juvenile corals raised from larvae.
The second
experiment examined the interaction between fragments of
Acropora pulchra and Porites cylindrica cultured
together. It has generally been accepted, based on years of
anecdotal observations and a few published scientific
papers, that physical interaction between corals will
usually have a negative effect on growth rates for both
species. This experiment was designed, however, employing
two species of corals that use overtopping as a competitive
mechanism. Because growth rate is an important function of
successfully overtopping a neighbor, I hypothesized that
growth rates would be maximized in the presence of a
competitor. Even the most seasoned coral grower may surprise
by these results! |

Ron Hessing
(and Mack!) |
Ron Hessing
is reef keeper, photographer, author, forum administrator and
webmaster of his site
www.marineaquarium.nl. Ron has been
involved with the exciting marine aquarium hobby for almost 16
years. The first snorkeling experience at Aruba was the start.
For the last six years he has maintained his own 1000 litre
(250 gallons) SPS dominated reef. It’s a 1000 litre aquarium.
Ron’s fascination
of marine aquariums has resulted in the search of the best
that West Europe can offer on this area. A part of these
visits is displayed on his own internet site. As an author he
has delivered articles for the Dutch reef keeping magazine and
online magazines. An article about the system of David Saxby,
London has brought great reviews.
Ron lives in the
centre of the Netherlands, with his wife, three sons, two dogs
and a parrot. In the Netherlands and Belgium he gives
lectures at aquarium associations. In 2006 he did his first
lecture overseas at Nerac II, Lireef NY. To be introduced and
placed on the American Masna speakers database is a fine
reward!
The presentation
at Macna XIX gives beginning and more experienced reefer ideas
to modeling his aquarium based on ecological niches on and
around the reef. Do something different and create an
aquarium with an interesting and unconventional biotope!
Let’s talk about
anemone aquariums, sea grass aquariums, cave aquariums, rubble
zone aquarium, reef wall aquarium and so on. Hands on items
like simple and complex aquascaping, illumination and water
motion will be discussed. Of course we don’t forget the
specified species best suitable for each biotope.
Let’s inspire each
other, let’s be creative aquarists! |

Kelly Jedlicki
|
Kelly
Jedlicki is a long-time aquarist and hobby contributor
working in the medical profession with a very long of
list of credentials. She brings her knowledge and
empathy for all animals and life to the practice of
aquariology. Areas of expertise include pathology,
predatory marine fishes and seahorses. Her special love
and study of pufferfishes earned her the moniker "puffer
queen’ by the highly respected reef photographer and
writer Scott Michael. She applies her practical wisdom
daily to an aquatic collection totaling around 3000
gallons of seawater. With fifteen years of industry
experience, her accreditation includes elected board
positions such as President and Vice president of the
Louisville Marine Aquarium Society, which has
successfully hosted three MACNAs, and Vice President of
MASNA. Kelly has her own forum, “Disease, Health &
Wellness, on MarineDepot.com. She has presented both
nationally and internationally and is looking forward to
presenting at her second MACNA.
Kelly
Jedlicki is a long-time aquarist and hobby contributor
working in the medical profession with a very long of
list of credentials. She brings her knowledge and
empathy for all animals and life to the practice of
aquariology. Areas of expertise include pathology,
predatory marine fishes and seahorses. Her special love
and study of pufferfishes earned her the moniker "puffer
queen’ by the highly respected reef photographer and
writer Scott Michael. She applies her practical wisdom
daily to an aquatic collection totaling around 3000
gallons of seawater. With fifteen years of industry
experience, her accreditation includes elected board
positions such as President and Vice president of the
Louisville Marine Aquarium Society, which has
successfully hosted three MACNAs, and Vice President of
MASNA. Kelly has her own forum, “Disease, Health &
Wellness, on MarineDepot.com. She has presented both
nationally and internationally and is looking forward to
presenting at another MACNA.
|

Dr. Sanjay Joshi
|
Sanjay
Joshi in real life is a Professor of Industrial and
Manufacturing Engineering at Penn State University. He has
been a reef addict since 1992, and currently keeps 3 reefs
at home 29G, 55G and a 500G SPS dominated reef. He also
co-manages the 500G aquarium at Penn State.
He has
published several articles in magazines such as Marine Fish
and Reef Annual, Aquarium Frontiers, Aquarium Fish, and
Advanced Aquarist. In addition he has been an invited
speaker at several marine aquarium society meetings. He
received the MASNA award in 2006, for his contributions to
the marine aquarium hobby. |

Daniel Knop
|
Daniel Knop,
born in 1957, lives in Germany. He has authored 16 books and
is chief editor of the marine aquarist magazine KORALLE
translated to Italian, English, Russian, and French
language. Two of his recent books (“Nano Reef Tanks” and
“Coral Guide of the Indo Pacific”) are now also available in
English language (the Nano book supposed to be released
during MACNA). Aside of his work as author and editor, he is
co-owner of a company producing marine aquarium equipment
and supplements (www.knop.de).
Daniel also
works on supporting coral farming and reef conserving
activities. In 1994 he developed a concept for farm-raising
of corals with the help of native fishermen and other
coastal citizens, firstly in the Philippines, later also in
Indonesia, where he led projects setting up coral farms. At
home in Germany he has reef aquaria from 6 to 6000 litres,
and he regularly dives in tropical coral reefs to study
inverts and make underwater photographs. Recently, a soft
coral genus has been named after him.
Presentation
MACNA 2007
“Fascinating
Fish Food” – or “Small Creatures Big Performance”
Aside of corals
and coral fish, our reef aquaria are home to numerous tiny
organism species rarely being recognized at all. But some of
those organisms have aesthetic properties and develop
interesting behaviour not less fascinating than the usually
maintained reef tank organisms. Daniel invites you to do
close observation, because there definitely is something
else we can observe in our aquaria. |

Sarah Lardizabal |
Sarah currently
calls Delaware home but has roots in Florida. She holds a
degree in wildlife conservation and is weighing her graduate
school options for marine and molecular biology. Her
scientific interests lean toward the application of the
advances of molecular biology and biotechnology to the
fields of marine science. She has worked in marine
biotechnology application projects, zebrafish, diatom and
plant genomics research and wetlands research.
Her marine
aquarium days started in early college and eventually moved
from reef setups to marine planted and seagrass dominated
aquaria. She is an avid SCUBA diver who dreams of running
her own live aboard operation in Belize and hopes to one day
become a professional instructor.
She has
interned and volunteered as an aquarist and husbandry aide
for several zoos and aquariums in the U.S. including the
National Aquarium in Baltimore, Maryland. Sarah hopes to
join the research team of an aquarium or zoo, and work as a
curator, after completing her education. When she isn't out
parading as gator or shark bait, wading through seagrass
beds in the Indian River Lagoon and the Chesapeake, she is
often luring reefkeepers to 'the dark side' in the Marine
Plant & Macroalgae forum here on Reef Central. |

Dr. Frank Marini
|
Frank Marini was
born and raised in Hudson Mass. After high school he joined
the Army and moved to Ft. Benning GA to complete his
Military education. Four yrs later he returned to
Massachusetts to attend and
complete college. In 1989 he moved to Houston TX to begin
his graduate training in Molecular biology at the University
of Texas.
From the start, fish, and fish tanks intrigued have always
me. My parents setup my first tank, a 30gal metal-framed
glass box containing seahorses when I was 12, I was hooked
from that day on. Since then, I’ve kept a number of
different fish and have always focused on predatory and
unusual fish. I started my first reef tank in 1986, and my
first large fish only in 1989. I fell hard for the banggai
cardinal fish in 1995, and after solving
the mating issues had multiple successful breedings. I have
been credited w/ having the first reported breeding of these
fish and successfully raising the fry. In 1997, I scaled up
my banggai production and was able to supply over 300
banggai fry to local Houston pet stores. I continued banggai
breeding for a few years thereafter, but again have
refocused on predatory fish (mainly the scorpionfish family:
lionfish, etc).
For the past years I’ve been a vocal proponent of keeping
Fish Only tanks and expounding the merits of keeping large
visually stunning fish. I’ve had the opportunity to breed a
number of ornamental fish and in collaboration with Martin
Moe wrote a series of articles on Fish breeding for the home
hobbyist in the online publication AdvancedAquarist. I
currently moderate one of the largest forums on home
ornamental breeding called "The Fish breeding forum" at
Reefcentral.com, and frequently contribute to topics in both
reef fish and Aggressive fish forums. |

Dr. Catherine McFadden |
Education & professional experience
-
B.S., Yale University
-
Ph.D., University of Washington
-
Postdoctoral Researcher, University of California, Davis
-
NATO Postdoctoral Fellow, Port Erin Marine Laboratory, Isle
of Man
-
Research Associate, University College, Dublin
-
Assistant Professor, Harvey Mudd College
-
Associate Professor, Harvey Mudd College
-
Research Associate, Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History
-
Professor of Biology, Harvey Mudd College
Research Interests
Professor McFadden’s research
addresses the evolutionary relationships of marine
organisms, primarily corals belonging to the cnidarian
sub-class Octocorallia. She and her students use a
variety of molecular techniques to address the
phylogenetic relationships among higher taxa of
octocorals, relationships of genera and species
boundaries in the soft coral family Alcyoniidae, and the
evolutionary consequences of hybridization between
species in the soft coral genus Alcyonium. Much
of the ongoing work in the lab focuses on the
construction of a detailed molecular phylogeny for
subclass Octocorallia as part of the NSF-funded
Cnidarian Tree of Life Project (see
http://cnidarian.info/).
Publications
See:
http://www.biology.hmc.edu/people/faculty/mcfadden.html |

Mike Paletta
|
Michael Paletta has been keeping marine tanks since 1980 and
reef tanks since 1985. During the past 20 years he has
written over 160 articles on marine fish and invertebrates
in both the US and Europe. His first book “The Modern Marine
Aquarium” is an attempt to simplify marine fish keeping for
the beginning hobbyist while at the same time incorporating
advances that have been made due to reef keeping. This book
has sold over 110,000 copies. His second book “Ultimate
Marine Aquariums” illustrates how far the hobby has come in
the past 15 years. In this book are examples of just about
every type of reef tank using different methodologies and
technology. Michael has enjoyed speaking at over 100 marine
societies and national conferences in North America, Canada
and Europe. Michael has appeared on both local and national
radio shows to discuss the hobby and to help new hobbyists
become successful. Currently Michael has 1,200 and 40-
gallon reef tanks set up in his home. He has helped in the
set up of over 140 tanks throughout the U.S, including
several tanks over 4,000 gallons in capacity. Michael also
acted as a consultant with the National Aquarium in
Baltimore and the Pittsburgh Zoo Aquarium. Michael has B.S.
from Dickinson College and a Master's degree from Yale
University. Michael has also been a technical consultant for
several equipment manufacturers and online companies.
Michael is currently employed in sales in the biotechnology
field. |

Steven Pro
|
I have been keeping freshwater aquariums for as long as I
can remember, but did not start with saltwater fish until
1993 during my junior year of college. Upon returning from
school, I was fortunate enough to reside only a short
five-minute drive from Poseidon’s Living Treasures, Anthony
Calfo’s greenhouse propagation facility. It was here that I
gained a tremendous resource of information and inspiration.
I am currently the proprietor of Pro Aquatic Services
Company, an aquarium sales and maintenance business in
Pennsylvania. I have long been active in the retail and
hobby sides of the ornamental aquatics industry. I have
taken an active and impassioned role in the industry as a
member of the Pittsburgh Marine Aquarium Society, Inc. for
the past seven years, having also been elected to the Board
of Directors for the last five years. I am also a member of
the greater Pittsburgh Aquarium Society, Inc. (the local
freshwater club), as well as previously serving a one-year
stint on the Board of Directors of the American Marinelife
Dealers Association.
You may have seen my name before if you ever visit the
aquatic information website
http://www.WetWebMedia.com,
as I previously answered some of the emailed daily questions
along with friends Anthony Calfo and site host Robert Fenner.
Eventually, the demands of family and business became too
great, and I had to "retire" from the WetWebMedia crew,
but I am still active on its message board.
I currently maintain a 120-gallon reef display, a
1500-gallon freshwater pond, a 75-gallon winter home for
turtles (when they aren’t out in the pond), as well as
numerous smaller tanks scattered throughout his house (much
to the chagrin of his wife) which are used for quarantining
livestock for customers. My previous 55-gallon reef tank
(which was taken down around the first of 2003 to make room
for the 120) is profiled on the Pittsburgh Marine Aquarium
Society, Inc.’s
http://www.pmas.org/pro/.
There is a good deal of husbandry information located there
and should provide insight into my aquarium keeping
philosophy. |

Dana Riddle |
A small, rocky
tide pool full of colorful anemones on the coast of Maine
initiated my fascination with marine invertebrates. At that
time (the mid-1960’s), keeping most invertebrates in
captivity, especially corals, was considered impossible, but
I tried anyway with limited success.
The ‘invasion’
of European technology in the 1980’s re-wrote the rules of
aquarium-keeping and I gladly bought just about every gadget
available. But coral-keeping still held its secrets and I
began to purchase laboratory equipment in order to better
understand the requirements of these ‘simple’ animals.
Today, my small
laboratory is just feet away from a thriving Hawaiian coral
reef, and allows year-round observations of corals in their
natural habitat. Almost $100,000 of lab gear is available to
collect data. This information is then compared to that
collected from aquaria.
My passions
(obsession?) lead to authoring a book (The Captive Reef
in 1997) and almost 150 articles in various hobby
literature. I’ve also been fortunate to have been invited
to speak at many conferences and club events over the last
10 years.
Super Corals:
How to
Maintain Them! How to Keep Them Colorful!
Gone are the
days when reef-keepers on the cutting edge of technology
kept brown Acropora specimens. Relatively recent
imports have included an astounding array of colorful stony
corals, and these are becoming readily available – but at a
price. Admit it – you’ve seen them; you’ve wanted them.
Before investing in these corals, be sure you understand
what it takes to keep them healthy and colorful. If you
think simply ‘lots of light’ is the answer, then think again
- you should attend this presentation! Information gathered
with a PAM fluorometer, quantum meter, fluorescence
spectrometers and other lab hardware reveal some of these
corals’ secrets! |

Dr. Ron Shimek |
I an
invertebrate zoologist with over 35 years of experience in
teaching about, and working with, marine and freshwater
invertebrates. When I teach I emphasize understanding the
organism’s role in its environment and how that role is
related to the functional morphology of the organism. My
primary research specialty is predator-prey interactions in
unconsolidated sediments, especially the interactions
involving various mollusks, particularly scaphopods (tusk
shells) and predatory snails. I have published more than 20
scientific articles, several of which were large monographs,
and I have been an invited speaker at about a dozen
international or national symposia sponsored by scientific
societies.
I have been
Chairman of the Biology Department of the University of
Alaska, Anchorage, and Assistant Director of the Bamfield
Marine Sciences Centre on Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
Additionally, I have also taught at the University of
Washington, the Oregon State University, and Montana State
University. I have also been employed as a taxonomic and
ecological consultant for the States of Alaska and Washington,
the U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, the National
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration, the National
Marine Fisheries Service, the USA Corps of Engineers, the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, several municipalities and several
private firms.
Awarded the
2001 MASNA Award for Outstanding Contributions to the Marine
Aquarium Hobby at MACNA 13, I have published over 100 articles
which have appeared in aquarium magazines published in the
United States. Additionally I am the author of two books:
The Coral Reef Aquarium, Published in 1999 by Howell Book
House, and Marine Invertebrates. 500+ Essential-To-Know
Aquarium Species. Published in 2004 by Microcosm/T. F. H.
Publications.
I speak
regularly at national, regional, and society meetings,
discussing and promoting rational reef aquarium keeping based
on the knowledge of natural systems.
Wilsall, Montana is my home, and I continue to
actively investigate the suitability of different organisms
for the aquarium hobby. |
|
Roy Torres |
|
|