Who would have thought a businessman with a vested interest in a steady supply of Benggais would be against a law which may affect his bottom line?Going to leave this here!
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Who would have thought a businessman with a vested interest in a steady supply of Benggais would be against a law which may affect his bottom line?Going to leave this here!
When they come for the rest of the fish in your tank (which they will) - don't say we didn't warn you... Yellow tangs recently, Banggai cardinalfish today - what's on the next "must ban" list tomorrow... Because guaranteed if you leave this up to groups like PETA - the only fish you'll have in your fish room will be the poster on your wall.Who would have thought a businessman with a vested interest in a steady supply of Benggais would be against a law which may affect his bottom line?
The issue with many (most) other species under this type of ban is that it becomes an issue of enforcement. How do you tell if person xxx selling Cardinalfish got them via import or bred themselves. If then there is no enforcement, then the government doesn't make sense with the law. If the goal is preservation of the species - it would be nice to see how this regulation is going to help.When they come for the rest of the fish in your tank (which they will) - don't say we didn't warn you... Yellow tangs recently, Banggai cardinalfish today - what's on the next "must ban" list tomorrow... Because guaranteed if you leave this up to groups like PETA - the only fish you'll have in your fish room will be the poster on your wall.
When they come for the rest of the fish in your tank (which they will) - don't say we didn't warn you... Yellow tangs recently, Banggai cardinalfish today - what's on the next "must ban" list tomorrow... Because guaranteed if you leave this up to groups like PETA - the only fish you'll have in your fish room will be the poster on your wall.
Totally agree with you. The point is that many of these guidelines that have been passed previously, have resulted in a total ban because its impossible for regulators to track what is bred in a tank in the US and what has been smuggled into the US - This is pretty long-standing policy for exotic animals that are endangered. As you stated, the way the current 'directive'/'proposal' is written does not state this - I also don't think its a conspiracy theory to bring up other possibilities that have applied to similar situations.Not that it matters here, but the Hawaii fish ban was lifted earlier this year. Permits are in the works of being issued but are going through a strict review by the state. This is all good too and will help actually prevent over fishing.
These are all smart people who don't want to listen to PETA any more than they want to read that ReefBuilders article. They will find out what they real numbers and issues are.
I honestly have my doubts some times.No one here thinks fish-keeping is unethical
Actually - I wonder if you've read the actual literature that national sea parks use to determine their boundaries? Many fish swim far further than 'tangs' - that we keep in our tanks. Though for some unclear reason - tangs are the ones that swimI honestly have my doubts some times.
Seeing wild tangs and angels makes me question how ethical it is to keep a fish that may normally swim 10 miles a day in a 4ft rectangle. I never cared until I experienced moving an Emperor Angel and a Naso Tang from a 200g display to our 4000g display - the tang especially swam like a bat outta hell, got huge and fat, had tons of new areas to graze. I had never seen it really "stretch it legs" until we made that move. The Emperor also became much more active, and I realized it could move pretty good too, but it spent a lot more time popping in and out of the rock work.
Obviously clowns, blennys, gobies, damsels, most wrasses etc...they spend a lot more of their life in a small sq ft and I think can be given a very appropriate aquarium home. It's the larger fish I wonder about. The ones that don't live in the rockwork most the time.
Do keep in mind that the majority of the fish we have in our tanks today would've been, well - eaten. Someday aquariums may be the only place we can actually see fish...I honestly have my doubts some times.
Edit - see an individual fish?Do keep in mind that the majority of the fish we have in our tanks today would've been, well - eaten. Someday aquariums may be the only place we can actually see fish...
See any fish. We have a problem with massive overfishing already, and all it will take is to start losing coral reefs to trigger a domino effect.Edit - see an individual fish?
The whole experience in all of these Banggai threads has led me to believe that if there ever is a total wild ban, then we will have ourselves to blame more than anything. There will always be human dummies - I am in the camp that if you idiot-proof something, a bigger idiot will come along.
The best that we can do to help the hobby is to get in EARLY to help wild conservation and numbers. Not only will this help the actual fish species, it can show that the hobby is here to do more than just take fish from the wild just to have our nieces with their braces and pigtails tap on the glass. If there is any actual doubt, then stop collection to at least evaluate for a while. If one of the big-three agencies wants to halt, then you halt.
It took billions of dollar from the beer/wine industry trying to fend off regulations before they finally realized that drinking responsibly and not all-that-you-can was the way to go. This hobby does not have billions of dollars to spend before we get it right, but we can learn from others.