Oh they do, trust me
It's different to a 'keeper' like we are here. None of us would do it. That being said, the average person would just dump, or if something happend (flood, tank damage etc...) the rays would be at risk of getting loose. Rays would breed like rabbits in FL waters. I knwo it doesn't seem like that to private ray keepers... but (as an example) one facility I worked at had so many ray pups we were feeding them out as enrichment for some of the bigger predatory fish.
What lol? that is crazy! I find that really interesting because I felt like even though the climate and ecosystem down hear could support them, I just cant wrap ny mibd around the idea that a fish that gives birth to live young and has no real parental instincts with small batch sizes could really take hold. It would take a very large amount of rays in my opinion to start a native population. I kind of felt like there was no way that the hobbiest in the area alone could feed enough unwanted rays into the water ways to actually establish anyhting. When the facility I work for wanted to get there permit to sell and distribute non-native ray species we had to viably proove that the amount of rays we would have at a given time was not enough to establish a population in lake Okeechobee. I suppose the risk is real if there was a large enough population that could be accidentally released at the same time via a storm. But I still find it hard to beleive that just hobbyist alone could release enough to justify restrictions, There should be a law limiting them but not outlawing them. I think you should have to get a permit. I know that most people would not end up with the permit anyway and still have the fish but it would still allow us decent ray keepers to keep our fish. I mean how could a ray be more of a threat than any number of other species.
It's different to a 'keeper' like we are here. None of us would do it. That being said, the average person would just dump, or if something happend (flood, tank damage etc...) the rays would be at risk of getting loose. Rays would breed like rabbits in FL waters. I knwo it doesn't seem like that to private ray keepers... but (as an example) one facility I worked at had so many ray pups we were feeding them out as enrichment for some of the bigger predatory fish.
What lol? that is crazy! I find that really interesting because I felt like even though the climate and ecosystem down hear could support them, I just cant wrap ny mibd around the idea that a fish that gives birth to live young and has no real parental instincts with small batch sizes could really take hold. It would take a very large amount of rays in my opinion to start a native population. I kind of felt like there was no way that the hobbiest in the area alone could feed enough unwanted rays into the water ways to actually establish anyhting. When the facility I work for wanted to get there permit to sell and distribute non-native ray species we had to viably proove that the amount of rays we would have at a given time was not enough to establish a population in lake Okeechobee. I suppose the risk is real if there was a large enough population that could be accidentally released at the same time via a storm. But I still find it hard to beleive that just hobbyist alone could release enough to justify restrictions, There should be a law limiting them but not outlawing them. I think you should have to get a permit. I know that most people would not end up with the permit anyway and still have the fish but it would still allow us decent ray keepers to keep our fish. I mean how could a ray be more of a threat than any number of other species.