H. zebra does not appear on any engangered, at risk, or CITES list for Brasil. It is not recognized as at risk or endangered by the European Union or US Fish and Wildlife. Also, the IBAMA ban included far more spp. than just H. zebra. The official reason given, according to Dr. Chao at the University of the Amazon in Manaus, was that the Brasilian government wanted to update its list of spp. permitted for export and put things on hold until the list was complete. This reasoning has nothing to do with protecting H. zebra, or any other fish for that matter.No study has been made but the fact the fishermen used to collect over 100 during a good day in the early days (mid 90's) and that just before the ban, they would consider themselves lucky to be able to catch 10... that makes to me already an alarming note....and I guess the IBAMA, mainly based its decision regarding this...
We all live in countries with governments... Do you think it more likely that in a country where 46 million citizens do not have access to sufficient food (Brasilian Embassy statistic) to live healthy lives, the government was trying to squash jobs and protect a three inch fish? Or are they re-evaluating the system to get their hands on a higher percentage of a multi-billion dollar a year industry that pays almost no taxes?
I am hardly faulting the Brasilian government for their actions, but I promise you the reasoning favors the government coffers and not the fish's survival.
Yann, I would take the complaints of collectors with a large grain of salt unless someone actually studied their catches for a few seasons. The collectors we were with in Colombia did nothing but complain the whole time we were there. Peru was taking away Colombia's business in the trade, exporters were not paying fair prices, Peruvians were poor and could take less money for their fishes, etc, etc.
The dip in prices was most likely the reason imports got smaller. When prices go down, it is less worth people's while to collect the fish and so less are collected. This normally causes prices to go back up, but at the time when the price was starting to bounce up again IBAMA came out with the ban.
This was the case in Colombia last month. Prices were down to around US 14.00 per 1,000 corys and nobody wanted to collect them. Importers will eventually run low, demand more, and exporters will have to up the price to make it worth the collector's while again. The only thing anyone was collecting, and this was the dry season, were arowana for the Asian market.
-Shane