




Maybe i will purchase thousands, then save I can some............SAVE THE OPAE ULA! DOWN WITH SEAHORSES!



Moderator: Mustafa
These are not red cherries; "Hawaiian reds" - Halocaridina rubra - naturally occur in brackish anchialine pools: habitat increasingly threatened [over 95% of Hawaiian anchialine ponds can no longer support them] by development and introduction of non-natives (both intentional and accidental). Despite their precarious status, they continue to be wild-collected in unsustainable (considering escalating environmental degradation) quantities for use as feeders. That is to say, the purchase of every single specimen of those death-condemned shrimp - all wild-caught from what I can tell - brings the wild extinction of this singular figment of Hawaii's indigenous fauna closer to realization.honeyrobber wrote:Now if I can find red cherries I would find them to pricey a meal. What I would worry about is that these are collected shrimp. That would just be wrong.
Individuals or vessels engaged in taking, selling or offering marine life for commercial purposes must obtain a Commercial Marine License. "Commercial purpose" means the taking of marine life for profit or gain, or as a means of livelihood, when the marine life is taken in or outside of Hawaii State, and when the marine life is sold, offered for sale, landed, or transported for sale anywhere in the State.
Every commercial marine licensee shall furnish to the Hawaii State Department of Land and Natural Resources a monthly report with respect to the marine life taken and the bait used. The report shall be submitted not later than the tenth day of the month following the month in which the marine life was taken. Failure or refusal to submit a monthly catch report shall be cause for revocation of the commercial marine license. Violators are also subject to fines of $25 to $500, and/or imprisonment of five to thirty days.