The name posted suggest this coral comes from Lord Howe Island, which is an Australian territory where all native fauna is totally protected.
Besides that, Australian Law does not allow the export of corals under any circomstances, so somebody is doing something very fishy here and in the U.S. Is that the way this hobby is supposed to protect the reefs of the world?
The name posted suggest this coral comes from Lord Howe Island, which is an Australian territory where all native fauna is totally protected.
Besides that, Australian Law does not allow the export of corals under any circomstances, so somebody is doing something very fishy here and in the U.S. Is that the way this hobby is supposed to protect the reefs of the world?
Maybe this will impress: penalties for unauthorised export of protected fauna from Australia include confiscation of assets used (boats or planes), up to $50.000 fines and 10 years in goal. Wo ever did this took a very big risk and might have got away with it only by pleading temporary insanity, but I guess it takes all kinds to make a world!
I forgot to mention: Australia and the U.S may not have ratified the Kioto agreement, but I am sure they have ratified CITES, and bearing this in mind, even the end-buyer of these corals could be prosecuted if he can not produce an official export licence from the Australian Customs. Ooops!
This coral comes from places other than Australia, and the person that said that they were unimpressed was probably talking about the coral, not the ramifications of importing Australian corals.