I think that's a great idea. I'm doing the same thing--except for the opposite coast. I have two 50G systems that are both set up as Florida biotopes: one fresh, one salt.
What kind of FW natives are there in Oregon? I was always under the impression that there weren't very many small, aquarium-friendly native freshwater fishes on the West Coast.
I've just got so bored by all the stuff that is readily available in the aquarium trade, and doing all the marine collecting got me thinking again about when I used to collect freshwater fish as a kid.
Going to be looking for Sculpins, Daces, Chubs, Suckers, and a lot of plant life and invertebrates.
Can you even legally collect natives on the Left Coast?
That's where everything that's legal, shouldn't be; and everything that isn't, should!
Yeah mostly just in Oregon though. Washington is a no go on anything that is not classified, which is everything except sport fish basically.
Pretty much no, not freshwater. Some California natives, broadly defined, are commercially available.
I don't know about Oregon, but WA doesn't allow collecting basically out of laziness in writing the regulations, and California seems to have a shoot-on-sight attitude about outdoorsy types who are liable to be hipsters, Texans, or even libertarians.
Sculpin are probably the only "aquarium-friendly" fish we have out this way.
LOL, yeah people in CA freak out about stuff like that. If only they knew how many millions of pounds of sealife is harvested and sent over seas they wouldn't worry so much about people taking a few for their aquariums.
It was pretty shocking once I started looking at the catch records for Oregons commercial fisheries. Like how the shark finning ban covers a bunch of large sharks, but hardly any small sharks. So there was 85,000 lbs of Spiny dog fish harvested last year out of Oregon. Not a lot of people eating them here in the states I imagine.