PeterIMA":3uchho52 said:
...what does the trade do?
It lays its cards on the table and explains to the USCRTF and legislators in honest terms what it has, what it doesn't have, what it can do and what it can't. This is no time for huffing, puffing, name-calling, finger-pointing and personal insults as Steve is engaging in on this forum. MAC did not write this bill, nor did it coach the writing of it - no matter what AMDA people would like you to think!
Please don't mistake my objective attempts at explaining what this bill is about and what it might mean as being a tacit approval of it. It has problems. Initially, one sees that it does not clearly define what it asks for. The bill from 2000 asked for sustainability in the wild harvest of CITES Appendix II reef animals. The new bill asks for sustainability in the wild harvest of all reef animals. Neither bill outlines just what they mean by sustainability. But at the same time, nobody is saying that sustainability isn't important. Stripped of all of its fringes, the bill simply wants non-destructive collecting (no cyanide) and sustainability of reef ecosystems while allowing wild harvest. That is nothing different than the dialogue in this forum has ever talked about. But it's clear that simply handing out nets, showing how to use them and teaching good methods of handling/transport isn't enough. There is a need for some sort of protocol about how to go about harvesting animals non-destructively from reef ecosystems without exceeding sustainability. One can catch too many blue tangs and clown triggers with barrier nets and push the situation to the wrong side of sustainability. The same is true for the harvest of corals and other invertebrates.
It needs to be said that the trade has not traditionally been done this way. There is a new demand for scientifically-based reef surveys and employment of mathematically-based formulas for sustainability. For the most part, this has not been done. There is at least one NGO that is setting the stage for this to happen in designated collecting areas, along with the establishment of marine protected areas (MPA) in association with those areas. It is pioneering work and everyone should know that it won't be a matter of everything falling into place overnight. It's expensive, but the trade has not shouldered this cost. It has been funded by grants.
Despite what you have been told here the bulk of the MAC grant monies that is paid out to staff, contractors and other personnel goes to native peoples in the collecting countries. The MAC Philippines staff, contractors and trainers are Filipino. The MAC Indonesia people are Indonesian. MAC Fiji is Fijian. There are few exceptions to this. But it needs to be said that the statements here that all this money is going to "white city boys" is ridiculous, false and inflammatory. Over the course of this reform great quantities of grant funds are being and will be paid to "brown-skinned people" who are working towards this common goal.
Peter, there are problems with the ion selective electrode (ISE) cyanide detection test (CDT) as have been outlined in the MAC News. Merck (the mfg of the test) conducted a comprehensive battery of controlled tests in the Philippines. It was established that the ISE CDT will detect cyanide in the tissue of fishes. However, it was found that there are no consistent correlations between amount of cyanide exposure and amount found in the tissue. The same was true for time durations after exposure. Also false positives were found; that is fish had detectable amounts of cyanide in their tissues that weren't experimentally exposed to cyanide. The concern of course, is that the test may not serve as legitimate tool of law enforcement because of these problems. It has been turned over to an Asian university for further testing and evaluation.
Middletonmark, as far as I can tell, HR 4928 will not affect "basement hobbyist fraggers". But explicit definitions need to be revealed about the full scope of the bill. You are not a commercial aquaculture operation any more than a person selling a litter of puppies in their local want ads is a commercial dog breeder or kennel. Even so, the provisions of the bill's concern seems primarily focused on you not releasing frags into native waterways. A legitimate concern. There seems to be no call for you to be certified in any way, and probably not even licensed. You can bet that this will be explicitly defined as lobbyists force this legislation to be fully clear on all fronts.
This is no time for the trade to be fighting with itself. A forum like this could be a good venue for constructive, honest and objective dialogue about these issues. Time will tell if it will. A bad precedent has already been set here.