You say something as unproductive and ridiculous as that as your third post? Not a good start, friend.asian aros will be legal in the US, maybe after like 10,000 years..
You say something as unproductive and ridiculous as that as your third post? Not a good start, friend.asian aros will be legal in the US, maybe after like 10,000 years..
This doesn't make much senseSynopsis of the situation: wild populations are in danger. The amount of people who want to keep them is very small and will never be enough to elicit government change. Of the people who want to keep them/would keep them the amount who SHOULD keep them and would do so properly is an even smaller %. The point is it wont be changing soon and nor should it in my opinion.
The pressure put on the remaining wild population and the likely decline in quality and standards of the current farms in response to an increased demand would probably the ruin of the species, all so a very very few people could keep these wonderful fish.
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To increase wild population the farms would need to start over breeding from new wild stock as most if not all captive bred aro have been crossed at some pointWhat would be the best idead to help increase the population of wild asian arowanas?
I say no because smugglers then would be free to catch and sell them to suppliers to ship to the U.S...They'd have a bit of a cash cow and they would catch and sell as much as they could with no regard for the conservation of the species.Will it help the wild population if the ban on asian arowanas will be lifted right away?