Thanks for keeping us informed on these matters!
Done and signed.
Done and signed.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I fully realize it is very easy to become a pariah on these forums...but even at that risk I'm going against the collective grain here:
"The COVID-19 virus was not spread internationally through wildlife, but instead through human-to-human contact."
Animal transmission likely played a party initially
"Wildlife has been legally imported into the U.S. for over 50 years without creating a zoonotic incident, and these animals pose no more threat to human health than imported and domestic animals that are already in the country."
This is just flat out wrong and irresponsibly misleading... If anyone who has been visiting or fishing in S.Fla can attest..... Threats to Human health not withstanding, but there are other impacts just as bad if not worse
Ever since well meaning Europeans "responsibly" brought starlings, pigeons, cats, et et ...N.America took a HUGE hit ecologically... our pet industry can be "responsible" all it wants to, but it can't control millions of irresponsible consumers...
I fully realize it is very easy to become a pariah on these forums...but even at that risk I'm going against the collective grain here:
Agree....Yeah actually that was close to my thoughts also but the aquarium industry has some blame in Floridas aquatic invasive mess: floods, morons, et ...NTM everyone it seems has a “not in my backyard” attitude to wildlife. The fish we “consume” as pets does sometimes have a negative impact (not always)...while the numbers are a drop in the bucket compared to commercial fishing, Gordons Fish sticks and fried red snapper can’t invade ecosystems (No studies have been done on VandeKampfs “extra crispy” tho) ;DeadI get your point, but trying to fix our ecological problems by banning the pet trade is like trying to put out a forest fire with a watering can. Not to mention the legislation seems to have no desire to differentiate between the illegal endangered wildlife trade and harmless aquarium fish collection.
Pretty much why I didn’t either ....We need to decouple wildlife from the commodities market and local 3rd world economies, but at the same time offer sustainable alternatives .... its a negative feedback loop: rarity = more profits ... sooner or later. that swissguard basslet will equal a months salary for some enterprising Haitian ....I agree. This letter is mostly about maintaining a status quo of profiting from wild-caught animals. And while I realize the letter is in response to a knee-jerk reaction, this conversation is worth having for other reasons. I will not sign.
Wildlife trafficking, appologies in advance for the soapbox moment here...but this is our hobby and our planet ...the conversations needs to develop further...
Agree....Yeah actually that was close to my thoughts also but the aquarium industry has some blame in Floridas aquatic invasive mess: floods, morons, et ...NTM everyone it seems has a “not in my backyard” attitude to wildlife. The fish we “consume” as pets does sometimes have a negative impact (not always)...while the numbers are a drop in the bucket compared to commercial fishing, Gordons Fish sticks and fried red snapper can’t invade ecosystems (No studies have been done on VandeKampfs “extra crispy” tho) ;Dead
Pretty much why I didn’t either ....We need to decouple wildlife from the commodities market and local 3rd world economies, but at the same time offer sustainable alternatives .... its a negative feedback loop: rarity = more profits ... sooner or later. that swissguard basslet will equal a months salary for some enterprising Haitian ....