Its illegal over in murica due to its small wild population, which opening the American market would lead to large amounts of wild stocks being poached to fill the black market. But here someone in another country is eating one, when I whole point of monitoring of the species is to keep as many alive and healthy as possibleI find it pretty stupid that this woman would cook an expensive fish like this, and disturbing that she would be so petty as to do it just to spite her husband. Him laughing about it? Not sure how to respond to that; sounds like they make a perfect couple. Being together, they save two other lucky people from being miserable.
But, the idea that it's okay to eat a pacu...or maybe a tilapia...but not this particular fish seems completely hypocritical. Why is this fish's life worth more than that of another fish? Because you can't legally have one of these? Because you can't afford one? Because it's Asian? (That one really puzzles me...}
It's a fish. People eat fish all the time. If a person who keeps fish in a tank feels that eating fish is abhorrent because of some special connection they have, it might be possible to see some weird sort of logic to that...although that would be analogous to a dog-owner refusing to eat the flesh of any mammal. My father would have laughingly referred to that as a "harmless nut-case".
For the life of me, I can't understand the thought process behind this reaction.
'small wild population'? Where exactly is this small wild population of asian aros in the US? With the density of asian aro farms in South East (unlicensed or not) why would someone want to catch wild aros to sell.Its illegal over in murica due to its small wild population, which opening the American market would lead to large amounts of wild stocks being poached to fill the black market. But here someone in another country is eating one, when I whole point of monitoring of the species is to keep as many alive and healthy as possible
Its illegal over in murica due to its small wild population, which opening the American market would lead to large amounts of wild stocks being poached to fill the black market. But here someone in another country is eating one, when I whole point of monitoring of the species is to keep as many alive and healthy as possible
Wut i don’t even think there’s wild Asian arowanas in US LOLIts illegal over in murica due to its small wild population, which opening the American market would lead to large amounts of wild stocks being poached to fill the black market. But here someone in another country is eating one, when I whole point of monitoring of the species is to keep as many alive and healthy as possible
Its the wild population in its native region. People will see the demand and its always cheaper to do stuff illegally then legally, why invest in a legal breeding stock and starting a farm when you can take from the wild and make 100% profit'small wild population'? Where exactly is this small wild population of asian aros in the US? With the density of asian aro farms in South East (unlicensed or not) why would someone want to catch wild aros to sell.
I mean there is demand, I know of a few LFS caught illegally American’s who came over to buy Asian Aros and tried crossing the border or crossing the border to sell Asian Arowana’s to American’s.Wut i don’t even think there’s wild Asian arowanas in US LOL
...banning a certain product encourages a black market for that product, but saying to ban a product is wrong regardless of whatever reason it is banned for, because it causes a black market demand means that banning anything is useless and that everything should be legally obtainable and hope no product is misused in the process...
...whole point of monitoring of the species is to keep as many alive and healthy as possible...
...The goal is to preserve the species as a whole, not the individual fish...if you think that a legal ban on possession or killing an animal is the simplistic correct path towards protecting a species, then it's a good thing that you are not in a position to make these decisions...