I want to address a lot of things here. First contrary to what
D
dogofwar
said the Florida legislature has no part in the process and the governor does not sign this rule. FWC can do whatever they want. They are appointed by the governor and all of the commissioners are land developers. They made donations to the governor's campaign and became the head of the most powerful organization in the state. One that coincidentally has the most regulatory authority over things that are important to developers. Like gopher tortoise relocation and burrowing owl habitat. FWC law enforcement answers to almost no one. They do have an office of Inspector General. The head of that office just resigned after having an affair with the wife of an officer he was investigating. It sounds like she was using the IG to try to get her husband in trouble so she could win a custody battle that she was planning.
Top state investigator resigns amid probe over conflict of interest – Broward.US
The reason for this whitelist is herps. Commissioner Barreto is upset about pythons in the everglades, and big scary animals that keep people from wanting to stay in his hotels. Coincidentally he also sued the state to be allowed to dredge the Indian river lagoon to build more land so he could build more buildings
Florida wildlife chair criticized for lagoon development moves (palmbeachpost.com) . The reptile industry requested Burmese pythons and tegus be put on the conditional species list for years and were ignored. That would have kept them out of the hands of the public. The commission basically eliminated the conditional species list for reptiles and changed everything from conditional to prohibited. There was no grandfathering. People who built their businesses on exporting the animals out of the state got crushed. That is the inciting incident for the Holy Thursday Massacre.
For those like
D
dogofwar
accusing the pet lobby of drumming this up, I think you are mistaken as to what is really at stake here. If you have been at the Nonnative Species Technical Assistance Group meetings, you would have watched how this has progressed. Industry presented many solutions at the TAG meetings. It was discussed to expand the tier structure FWC currently has. Many species were brought up to add to the conditional and prohibited list.
pwmin
Colorado's whitelist was brought up. By the logic of CO's whitelist Florida fish keepers would only be keeping cold-water fish and very few herps. Collectively TAG members have donated over 2200 manhours of their time to be a part of this process over the last 18 months. I encourage all of you who can to come to the commission meeting and be part of the solution. Also come to the next TAG meeting. Watch people trying to make an impact. Watch the industry make suggestions and make public comments. Notice that HSUS has a seat at the table. The next one is in Tampa in June. I think the 13th and 14th.
As for the exotics that are established there are very few new species. Iguanas have been here longer than many of the people on this forum have been on this planet. Burms could have been prevented with a conditional listing earlier. You ask what sensible regulations look like it is not that complicated. Doing risk assessments on species that are likely to be an issue and place them on the conditional or prohibited species list. Best management practices are another good move. In 2000 the Aquaculture BMPs became mandatory and are regulated by the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS) Division of Aquaculture. Since then, no conditional or prohibited species have been established in Florida through Aquaculture. The reptile industry probably needs a Division of Herpetoculture with similar BMPs. Also remember that FWC who is pushing how terrible the nonnative situation has become, is still protecting nonnative peacock bass as a gamefish. There are size and bag limits to protect this nonnative species that has pushed into the everglades. They are concerned if we allow people to take as many as they want the fish will disappear. However, if a new species of peacock bass like kelberi gets established the story will be ornamental fish keepers are irresponsible.
To be clear there are allegedly two options on the table. Option 1 is that if something is in trade it can stay in trade in Florida and will be on the whitelist. We will see if that holds true. Industry has put forward a list of about 30,000 species across all taxa that have been in trade and are believed to be in possession. They were basically given a month to make that list so there may be omissions. If that is rejected and they say only species that you have receipts for in the last 12 months, all of those ALA, AKA, and CARES fish hobbyists like
aussieman57
are working with would be illegal to bring into Florida. If you are a hobbyist who moves to Florida and brings one of these fish in, you would be guilty of illegal importation of these species. You will be labeled as a wildlife trafficker like these guys were labeled poachers for not having the receipt for clearly purchased IQF lobsters.
Wildlife officers face criticism over citation for 71 lobster tails (usatoday.com)
Option 2 says nothing that hasn't already been evaluated by FWC would be allowed on the whitelist. There are less than 250 species evaluated and that includes the prohibited and conditional list. The other animals are Class1 and Class2 wildlife very few people have the money to keep these animals.
Class I Wildlife | FWC (myfwc.com) Class II Wildlife | FWC (myfwc.com)
For destroying the tropical fish industry, we are talking about $172 million in sales.
UF survey: Florida tropical fish farmers bring state $172 million in sales - News (ufl.edu) Many of these farms have been encroached upon by suburban development. I think a lot of people would be happy to crush those businesses, make the farmer sell under duress and turn that into more real estate. A good example of this encroachment is Consolidated Fish Farm. You should be checking out their online store by the way. They have been surrounded by development. That parcel north of them is being rezoned for multifamily housing. For now, Consolidated is taking advantage of it by opening up retail, but other farms have been harassed into moving before, and as the value of that land keeps going up someone is going to want it. Another farmer has had a lot of development around him. When he went to the zoning meeting the developer was asked if he was finished in the area. He said, there is one more plot we are either going to buy or take, but that should be the end. Below consolidated is the old Carters Fish Hatchery.


As for the other political commentary here, I thought that was against the rules of the forum, but maybe a moderator like
duanes
can clarify. I am sure we all have a lot of opinions on a lot of topics, and we could make this forum intolerable in a hurry. I personally enjoy that this is a place I can come and just talk about fish.
