- Joined
- Dec 24, 2018
- Messages
- 923
With that I wholly agreeThese media stories of people getting caught smuggling tarantulas always raises the point that what is legal isn't necessarily ethical, and what is ethical isn't necessarily legal. Collecting American tarantulas by the thousands, or hundreds of thousands, then exporting them internationally or selling domestically with all of the appropriate permits is legal, but there is no way that is ethical. Collecting and smuggling a few tarantulas for the purposes of a captive breeding program- and selling the offspring of such an effort- would be very illegal according to federal law of the United States, but it is ethical so long as one firsts understands the population and biology of the target species.
I never heard of anyone collecting a few tarantulas from their habitat for a breeding program and releasing the offspring back into their natural habitat. From a conservationist standpoint that would be awesome. I do not know what legal barriers exist in doing such.
From an ethical point as long as it's known 100% by the person breeding they have the same T's and known morph types then by all means please do. If a habitat has been completely destroyed then that would have it's barriers.
Smuggling can be dealt with the same way Africa deals with poaching. If other countries enacted that I suspect smuggling would definitely lower quite a bit. Just like poachers in Africa they still risk their life to keep poaching.