Catching and sending fish home from Hawaii?

Western_reefer

Reef keeper
Hey guys, I have a question, I'm in Hawaii right now and was wondering if its possible to catch a few reef fish and send them home? If you can, how do yoi go about doing that?
 
I'm sure you can, look up local laws. I would probably be careful since taking them out of their natural habitat putting them in a bag and mailing them to put in a tiny glass cage would probably stress the fish out a lot, not to mention all the parasites and what not you could bring with you. Me personally would leave the fish and maybe grab some cool corals to bring home.
 
Yeh, all of the above aint gonna happen, unless you plan on staying in Hawaii in custody for destroying an already fragile reef.
 
http://hawaii.gov/dlnr/dar/licenses_permits.html section 9

It's kind of a touchy area for locals because there is an activist named Snorkel Bob that is trying to ban the aquarium trade in Hawaii first, and the world period without supporting facts. Many of the local aquarist have been fighting this off for three years or more with petitions. If you take 1/4 of LPS or SPS off of that reef, and it is reported by license plate, you are going to regret it. They use things like this to add fuel to the fire. If you go by the DNR you can't go wrong, Mahalo!
 
http://hawaii.gov/dlnr/dar/licenses_permits.html section 9

It's kind of a touchy area for locals because there is an activist named Snorkel Bob that is trying to ban the aquarium trade in Hawaii first, and the world period without supporting facts. Many of the local aquarist have been fighting this off for three years or more with petitions. If you take 1/4 of LPS or SPS off of that reef, and it is reported by license plate, you are going to regret it. They use things like this to add fuel to the fire. If you go by the DNR you can't go wrong, Mahalo!

Is that the same Snorkel Bob who wrote the snorkel/dive guide to the Big Island?
 
Is that the same Snorkel Bob who wrote the snorkel/dive guide to the Big Island?

Yeah, he has a shop here on oahu.

As for the fish collection, you can get a free permit from the dnlr if you're a resident. But it's honestly difficult to catch fish during the day, and nothing too interesting, unless you're diving deep.

If you're deadset on bringing fish home with you, check out Coral Fish Hawaii in Aiea. Kevin from Pacific Island Aquatics is here too, and just have them ship it for you. Besides that, just try try reef walk/ torching at night, you can easily find lots of juvenile butterflies and other critters. There is also a couple good minus tides around 10AM on the 25th or so.

Oh yea, definitely forget about all LPS & SPS coral too... Only zoas and palys and other "nonreefbuilding" corals are "legal" here, but even that is ambiguous..

Enjoy your stay here!
 
I had a feeling after posting I was probably wrong. Thinking if you took a little piece of coral wouldn't hurt much, but if you are doing it and everyone else is it would do a lot of damage.
 
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