Originally posted by Strider
I checked my local Fish and Game regs and it stated that snakeheads were illegal in Idaho since 1994. If Idaho had a law like this a long time ago I imagine many other states did as well and it wasn't enforced or even noticed. Heck even three types of pirahna are illegal(Serrasalmus, Rosseveltiella, Pygocentrus).
HOLY COW! I just noticed you're here in ID, and right here in Moscow! Do you go to the UI by chance?
I live in Lewiston, but drive up for classes...
Anyways, I thought that Piranha were legal here untill just recently - I got my g/f three for her birthday a few years back from a reputable LFS, but they now say they cannot sell Piranha, or take them in (money is tougher since Bush stumbled in, and upgrading their tank will be harder than expected)
I definately think that this should be left up to the individual states. Places like Az and Fl would jump to ban it, but places here along the Canadian border might not see the need (I guess some of southern ID is warm enough for Channidae?)
I didn't know they were importing these fish as eggs, either. But, then again for shipping costs, it makers sense.
Of course, that makes you wonder - how hard/easy is it to tell a Snakehead egg from, say, a trout, salmon, bass, or [insert other legal fish name here] egg?
Yes, there's a law, but is it an enforcable one? It seems like the existing laws already have enough ways to skirt them, or just blatantly defy them. Probably because of lack of enforcement - I doubt the FWS has the resources to send a biologist by every LFS to check up!
No, I'm not advocating breaking any laws, but maybe we should think of a better way to achieve the same goals.
Yes, microchipping and registering the fish wouldn't actually stop someone from dumping them, but if you knew that IF you dumped the fish into a river/lake while it was still alive that you would get a hefty fine ($10,000 enough?, $100,000? Fine+10% of the cleanup operation?) that might provide some deterrent.
Having to go through a liscencing/registration process would likely also deterr the people who want the fish as a macho thing (hey, it's the right shape

) or status symbol, or just to show off "heh, heh, look at my mean fish...".
I think these are the kinds of people who would be more likely to dump when the fish gets big (if it is a species that does get large) anyways, not the dedicated fishkeeper who wants to keep the fish because they like the species, and would be willing to go through a bit of paperwork.
Oh, and you could regulate as well that you cannot own more than one of a species, or even more than one snakehead.