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justinl 04-12-2009 03:38 AM

scary
 
this kind of thing frightens me a great deal. I know it's American, but we all know this will severely affect us if it passes. Plus, if American government does it, you know Canada will follow suit shortly.

http://reefcentral.com/forums/showth...readid=1616945

ps. take that RC, you can't delete this thread! :mrgreen:

Snaz 04-12-2009 03:42 AM

I would be interested to know if farm raised fish would be exempt. Florida has MANY fresh water tropical fish farms that supplies much of the aquarium hobby. A bill like this might accelerate inland SW farming too which is always good.

karazy 04-12-2009 04:06 AM

That is scary.

personally i think that it will not go through, because:

1.with the way the economy is going, getting rid of 100's of peoples jobs doesn't seem very intelligent

2.president Obama seems like quite the family man, and i think he wouldn't let family's allover America lose their pets.

3.there's just way too much money and way too many people in the pet trade to get rid of most of it.

jsmth321 04-12-2009 04:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snaz (Post 409858)
I would be interested to know if farm raised fish would be exempt. Florida has MANY fresh water tropical fish farms that supplies much of the aquarium hobby. A bill like this might accelerate inland SW farming too which is always good.


As far as I know farm raised fish are not exempt, if passed it would virtually prevent all non-native fish from being kept.

The pet lobby is fighting it, but its gonna be down to which lobby is stronger.

TVR 04-12-2009 04:59 AM

Heard about but never actually seen the "actual" people / doccuments related.
Hope this mater wont come true

spreerider 04-12-2009 06:01 AM

they did this in bc a while ago, but pet lobby fought it and ended up winning alot of ground and it was changed so there was no blanket ban.
The only things banned were dangerous animals like crocidiles and tigers, poisonous animals were put on a restricted list and require a licence to own now.
At least this is what i was told on bcaquaria

midgetwaiter 04-12-2009 07:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Snaz (Post 409858)
I would be interested to know if farm raised fish would be exempt. Florida has MANY fresh water tropical fish farms that supplies much of the aquarium hobby. A bill like this might accelerate inland SW farming too which is always good.

There's no exemption in this version of the bill for zoos never mind commercial breeding.

TVR 04-12-2009 02:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by spreerider (Post 409922)
The only things banned were dangerous animals like crocidiles and tigers, poisonous animals were put on a restricted list and require a licence to own now.

Talking about restricted. How about snake, the big snakes? - Back in the time at the country side, I've seen snake killed cows, pigs, chicken... (Not talking about poison here) - I've seen lately some of my friend raise some big snakes and having babe at the same time. big snakes love fresh meat and what would happen if he accidently got out of cage?
And many raise those scary small snake and even breeding them. And let kids play with the new born snakes.
:redface: May be I chicken, but that deffinitely look scary to me :redface:

mike31154 04-12-2009 02:54 PM

He, he, I don't think something like this has a hope. You'd have to include dogs, cats, the list goes on. They'd be killing a huge industry. All those eccentric actors/actresses would have to give up their puppies with the fashion hairdos and pink highlights in their fur. Maybe they should consider banning non indigenous humans too, especially the wacky ones that keep coming up with this stuff.

I get a real kick out of the average schmoe not being allowed to bring some agricultural products, like an apple say, across the border between BC & Washington. Could be some pest or disease in there. Yet tropical fruits like bananas, pineapples etc. come into virtually every northern/western country daily. Who knows what lurks inside those shipping containers, despite the toxic pesticides they use to supposedly render them safe from hitchhikers.

Leah 04-12-2009 03:06 PM

Next time you go to the supermarket watch to see when they unload bananas.......
they usually wear gloves, ever ask yourself why?
Somehow I doubt that this will be high on anyones priority list given the certain real
problems facing the U.S. at the moment. Oh and Canada.

fishoholic 04-12-2009 03:41 PM

:eek: Yikes! That is scary. Lets hope that never happens.

bignose 04-12-2009 05:12 PM

This seems unrealistic considering it's a billion dollar industry.

jsmth321 04-12-2009 11:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mike31154 (Post 409944)
He, he, I don't think something like this has a hope. You'd have to include dogs, cats, the list goes on. .

Dogs, cats and goldfish and some farm animals have an exemption.

digital-audiophile 04-13-2009 01:17 AM

Really? This isn't an april fools joke?

What are they really trying to accomplish here? Keep PETA happy?

mike31154 04-13-2009 03:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jsmth321 (Post 410059)
Dogs, cats and goldfish and some farm animals have an exemption.

Yes, I was aware of that, the point I'm trying to make is, where do you draw the line? What makes one species more harmful to the 'native' land than another?

You should see the headlines in Kelowna due to the feral rabbit problem in the city. It's hilarious. Downtown is overrun with the critters and on one side you have the folks that want them gone no matter how and the other camp is in a tiffy because of the 'method' used to cull them. And it was so called pet lovers that created the problem in the first place because they set them loose after the novelty of having one wore off.

In the south Okanagan there's an issue with wild horses and I remember living in Ottawa, people complaining about the 'native' deer population being a danger to drivers. If people just used a little common sense and took responsibility for their actions with respect to pet ownership, there wouldn't be a problem nor a need for some misguided politician to draft up something like this. People are losing their jobs/livelihood and certain politicians have nothing better to do than come up with something like this?

Ok, gotta calm down... Happy Easter.

Delphinus 04-13-2009 03:32 AM

Huh. Interesting..

RuGlu6 04-13-2009 03:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Leah (Post 409947)
Next time you go to the supermarket watch to see when they unload bananas.......
they usually wear gloves, ever ask yourself why?
Somehow I doubt that this will be high on anyones priority list given the certain real
problems facing the U.S. at the moment. Oh and Canada.

So why do the wear gloves? To protect hands from what?
thx

Delphinus 04-13-2009 03:59 AM

To quote the Banana Boat song,

Quote:

A beautiful bunch a' ripe banana
Daylight come and me wan' go home
Hide the deadly black tarantula
Daylight come and me wan' go home
I'm sure other things probably hide in there too. :lol:

jsmth321 04-13-2009 05:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mike31154 (Post 410089)
Yes, I was aware of that, the point I'm trying to make is, where do you draw the line? What makes one species more harmful to the 'native' land than another?

I suppose that would be up to the biologists and other experts at the US Fish and Wildlife service to determine.

Appears there were a group if 14 democrats who were bored.

The main sponsor is from Guam and Guam does have a serious issue of introduced species that are wrecking havoc on native bird populations, so I can see why it would be of importance to that particular member of congress.

It would be better to mandate each state/territory to bring up their own list as a species that is a threat to Florida may not be one in Maine.

Sebae again 04-13-2009 06:19 AM

Yep Delphinus you are right.When I used to work at the old Woodwards food floor one came out of a bunch of bananas at the check out.The cashiers screams were more terrifying than the sight of the spider.That cashier had dance moves that Michael Jackson couldnt even do.Two more seconds and I would have had the thing bagged for the lucky customer.

midgetwaiter 04-13-2009 07:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jsmth321 (Post 410107)
The main sponsor is from Guam and Guam does have a serious issue of introduced species that are wrecking havoc on native bird populations, so I can see why it would be of importance to that particular member of congress.

It would be better to mandate each state/territory to bring up their own list as a species that is a threat to Florida may not be one in Maine.

See now that's completely unrealistic.

It would require that the representative actually invest time and attention to crafting a bill that would allow and require each state to do the the job. You'd then need some kind of reporting and monitoring framework, etc. Way more work to draft that bill than having your unpaid intern write a two pager while you attend a $2000 a seat fund raising dinner. It might even require the representative to actually miss a couple of those fund raisers and that can't happen.

This is why this legislation doesn't especially worry me.

Pan 04-13-2009 10:18 AM

.

Pan 04-13-2009 10:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by digital-audiophile (Post 410070)
Really? This isn't an april fools joke?

What are they really trying to accomplish here? Keep PETA happy?

PETA may go about it wrong...but their message is worthwhile.

mike31154 04-13-2009 04:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by jsmth321 (Post 410107)
I suppose that would be up to the biologists and other experts at the US Fish and Wildlife service to determine.

Appears there were a group if 14 democrats who were bored.

The main sponsor is from Guam and Guam does have a serious issue of introduced species that are wrecking havoc on native bird populations, so I can see why it would be of importance to that particular member of congress.

It would be better to mandate each state/territory to bring up their own list as a species that is a threat to Florida may not be one in Maine.

Hmm, interesting. Thanks for the info on Guam. Did some reading on this US 'territory'. Seems they do have some serious issues with their ecology. Apparently mainly due to tourism though, before the EPA got in there an laid down some rules. Good article on wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guam

All kinds of horror stories re the introduction of non native species, but I don't really see the correlation to our hobby, other than overfishing maybe. Introduction of domestic livestock, tourism, agriculture... Not hobbyists creating the problem as much as the human species doing what they do, move in, develop and try to make a living.

"Aquatic preserves
As a vacation spot for scuba divers, efforts have been made to protect Guam's coral reef habitats from pollution, eroded silt, and overfishing that have led to decreased fish populations. In recent years the Department of Agriculture, Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources has established several new marine preserves where fish populations are monitored by biologists.[20] Prior to adopting U.S. Environmental Protection Agency‎ standards, portions of Tumon bay were dredged by the hotel chains in order to provide a better experience for hotel guests.[21][22] Tumon Bay has since been made into a preserve. A federal Guam National Wildlife Refuge in northern Guam protects the decimated sea turtle population in addition to a small colony of Mariana fruit bats.[23]"

Pan 04-13-2009 11:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mike31154 (Post 410195)
Hmm, interesting. Thanks for the info on Guam. Did some reading on this US 'territory'. Seems they do have some serious issues with their ecology. Apparantly mainly due to tourism though, before the EPA got in there an laid down some rules. Good article on wikipedia:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guam

All kinds of horror stories re the introduction of non native species, but I don't really see the correlation to our hobby, other than overfishing maybe. Introduction of domestic livestock, tourism, agriculture... Not hobbyists creating the problem as much as the human species doing what they do, move in, develop and try to make a living.

"Aquatic preserves
As a vacation spot for scuba divers, efforts have been made to protect Guam's coral reef habitats from pollution, eroded silt, and overfishing that have led to decreased fish populations. In recent years the Department of Agriculture, Division of Aquatic and Wildlife Resources has established several new marine preserves where fish populations are monitored by biologists.[20] Prior to adopting U.S. Environmental Protection Agency‎ standards, portions of Tumon bay were dredged by the hotel chains in order to provide a better experience for hotel guests.[21][22] Tumon Bay has since been made into a preserve. A federal Guam National Wildlife Refuge in northern Guam protects the decimated sea turtle population in addition to a small colony of Mariana fruit bats.[23]"

Good 'ol wikipedia... heh

BlueAbyss 04-14-2009 07:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mike31154 (Post 409944)
Yet tropical fruits like bananas, pineapples etc. come into virtually every northern/western country daily. Who knows what lurks inside those shipping containers, despite the toxic pesticides they use to supposedly render them safe from hitchhikers.

I've seen banana spiders come out of crates of bananas. These things are, as it turns out, poisonous tarantula-type spiders... most of the time they are dead by the time they get to Canada, but at least one has survived long enough to be captured and identified. And this is in Northern Manitoba, so these guys are pretty tough and can survive a long shipping route. EDIT: just noticed some other posts about these guys. Cute, aren't they?

If they ban non-native species, EVER, I'm gonna start breeding lynx. We'll see how they like very large housecats that can take down ravens. So much for the songbird population...

GreenSpottedPuffer 04-17-2009 05:29 PM

I didn't read this thread so i am not sure if its been brought up but the knee jerk reaction is that its a bad idea. Not really true. Personally I like it to force the aquaculture industry to pick up and start the breeding of angels, tangs, ect.

But most importantly people need to actually read and understand the bill, not just get caught up in the hype of RC posters.

It DOES NOT ban all non-native species and would not kill the industry at all.

Only would ban species that are (a) non-native AND (b) on the unapproved list.

INCLUDED SPECIES- The list under this subsection shall include--
(A) those species listed as injurious wildlife under section 42 of title 18, United States Code, or under regulations under that section, as of the date of enactment of this Act; and
(B) any other species the Secretary determines under section 4(c)(2)(B) is not approved for importation.


So only species that pose a threat to local wildlife as they are invasive and can do some real harm. As we are seeing in Florida and the Caribbean right now.

Based on how the 'unapproved list' is proposed, its unlikely to effect the pet trade much at all. Some common species like Lionfish may be tough to get but even then, before any species go to the 'unapproved list' there is a chance for the public to speak up:

(3) PUBLIC NOTICE AND COMMENT- Before issuing the final preliminary list of approved species under this subsection, the Secretary shall--
(A) publish in the Federal Register and make available on a publicly available Federal Internet site, the proposed preliminary list; and
(B) provide for, a period of not less than 60 days, an opportunity to submit public comments on the proposed preliminary list.

And:

(f) Animals Owned Lawfully Prior to Prohibition of Importation- This Act and regulations issued under this Act shall not interfere with the ability of any person to possess an individual animal of any species if such individual animal was legally owned by the person before the risk assessment is begun pursuant to subsection (e)(3), even if such species is later prohibited from being imported under the regulations issued under this Act.


In the end, reefers should be supporting bills and proposals like this to protect local wildlife and reefs. I think people just need to do a bit more reading before commenting. It seems everyone took this as a ban on the hobby when it really is nothing close. Will it effect the hobby? For sure but not likely to effect it much...not to mention the likely hood of it being passed is slim.

jsmth321 04-19-2009 03:46 AM

Big issues with the bill are:

The bill requires the USFWS to deem what species are a potential risk not an actual risk.

Currently species are only banned if they pose and actual threat.

Big proponents of the bill are animal rights groups.

A species that poses a threat in Hawaii could be banned in all 50 states.

The USFWS lacks the resources to conduct the risk assessments on all non-native species within 37 month


We just dont know what the USFWS will come up with. But this bill is not a direct attack on reef/marine hobby and was not written for that purpose.

As for captive breeding, some species just will never be easy or commercially viable to breed in captivity simply because of the way nature has them breeding.

not to mention the likely hood of it being passed is slim.

If it gets through committee which it could, it could very well find its way into another larger more important piece of legislation and back door passed, would not be the first time they passed a bill this way.

High tide 04-19-2009 05:44 PM

The sky is falling!!!! Some people get their knickers in a twist way too easily.

Relax, take a deep breath, and consider the source. This thread is pure hypothesis and should be taken with a grain of salt. Florida and Hawaii have legitimate concern, being states where tropical fish and inverts can survive and even thrive..... the same cannot be said of V. Island or New Brunswick.

GreenSpottedPuffer 04-19-2009 10:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by High tide (Post 412503)
The sky is falling!!!! Some people get their knickers in a twist way too easily.

Relax, take a deep breath, and consider the source. This thread is pure hypothesis and should be taken with a grain of salt. Florida and Hawaii have legitimate concern, being states where tropical fish and inverts can survive and even thrive..... the same cannot be said of V. Island or New Brunswick.

Well no this is very, very real for the US. It may happen and is most likely just the ground work for future bills to be passed even if not this time. As often the case, Canada may follow.

But again, it's not something that will end this hobby anyways.


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