A
Anonymous
Guest
This is addressed to all those that have ever accused me of being status quo regarding the cyanide issue:
According to publicly available information regarding cyanide testing, the currently available CDT (that relies on the ion-selective electrode method) used by the IMA can routinely detect cyanide several weeks after exposure. After/during that time the residual cyanide may be converted into other compounds (such as thiocyanate) for which there are currently no accepted detection methodologies. Unless fish are held for several weeks before they are imported there is a CDT that could detect cyanide in the U.S.. The current IMA CDT would no doubt catch at least some of the "juiced" fish that were illegally caught and shipped to the U.S. I'm certain the current test would create havoc to those that import juiced fish - enough havoc to move the issue to a higher prominence both in the public and the regulatory eye.
All it would take to really turn the heat up on the issue of cyanide captured fish being imported into the U.S. would be to purchase target fish from some major U.S. importers and run the IMA CDT and publicly disclose the results. This would not require a random sample – a person would be looking for the most likely "dirty fish". This need not be expensive, it would certainly cost less than sending netting to the P.I. According to our industry experts here finding blatantly dirty fish shouldn’t be that difficult to do. Just be certain to contact local media to get the word out and create public outcry.
Some possible ramifications:
1) Government suspension of tropical imports. (A lot of establishment jobs might be lost. It might be fair – a lot of these people have been lying for a long time about the cyanide issue.)
2) Increased policing stateside of tropical imports.
3) Exporters might hold fish longer prior to shipping to assure that cyanide is either excreted or converted. (That would be fine, let the juiced fish die in the exporters hand and not the hobbyist hands – that would hurt their pocketbook)
4) Intensification of policing activities in the collection areas.
5) Increase in net capture of fish.
Forget the idea of a boycott, test and create gridlock for the status quo.
Anyone, at any time, could seriously upset the cart that has been supposedly pushed around for so long.
To intense for ya? Anybody want to send me a box of triggers and angelfish?
-Lee
According to publicly available information regarding cyanide testing, the currently available CDT (that relies on the ion-selective electrode method) used by the IMA can routinely detect cyanide several weeks after exposure. After/during that time the residual cyanide may be converted into other compounds (such as thiocyanate) for which there are currently no accepted detection methodologies. Unless fish are held for several weeks before they are imported there is a CDT that could detect cyanide in the U.S.. The current IMA CDT would no doubt catch at least some of the "juiced" fish that were illegally caught and shipped to the U.S. I'm certain the current test would create havoc to those that import juiced fish - enough havoc to move the issue to a higher prominence both in the public and the regulatory eye.
All it would take to really turn the heat up on the issue of cyanide captured fish being imported into the U.S. would be to purchase target fish from some major U.S. importers and run the IMA CDT and publicly disclose the results. This would not require a random sample – a person would be looking for the most likely "dirty fish". This need not be expensive, it would certainly cost less than sending netting to the P.I. According to our industry experts here finding blatantly dirty fish shouldn’t be that difficult to do. Just be certain to contact local media to get the word out and create public outcry.
Some possible ramifications:
1) Government suspension of tropical imports. (A lot of establishment jobs might be lost. It might be fair – a lot of these people have been lying for a long time about the cyanide issue.)
2) Increased policing stateside of tropical imports.
3) Exporters might hold fish longer prior to shipping to assure that cyanide is either excreted or converted. (That would be fine, let the juiced fish die in the exporters hand and not the hobbyist hands – that would hurt their pocketbook)
4) Intensification of policing activities in the collection areas.
5) Increase in net capture of fish.
Forget the idea of a boycott, test and create gridlock for the status quo.
Anyone, at any time, could seriously upset the cart that has been supposedly pushed around for so long.
To intense for ya? Anybody want to send me a box of triggers and angelfish?
-Lee