Of course we shouldn't be selling RIFAs, but I ask you again - do you have proof or firsthand experience that these super expensive $5 red imported fire ants were even sold? In states that were already laughably invaded with them? (I would know, I've lived and grew up in three of those states)
Or do you just like making innuendos, spreading misinformation, and typing in lots of CAPS for the sake of sensationalizing issues?
They were available on the GAN site for purchase and that is enough. At some point someone is going to buy them.
Also it doesn't matter if they're already in a state - just look at Texas where the southern and eastern areas of the state are completely overrun by fire ants but the western counties are still pretty much clear of them. This is also the point were the only-sell-within-a-state concept of GAN fails - the RIFA quarantine zone runs straight through the middle of at least four states which means selling imported fire ants to people on the opposite end of the state (or in the worst case the neighboring county) would actually be illegal.
And while I agree that antkeeping is the least likely way for invasive ants to spread (they usually do that very well by hitch-riding commercial transports) with the GAN project and it's relation to the AntsCanada Youtube channel that overly targets a very young premature audience the chances of those ants ending up in the hands of a clueless kid with equally clueless parents and terminally getting dumped into the backyard after the kid lost interest in them is actually a lot bigger than with usual ant exchange/shop pages.
The irony and hypocrisy of your entire response is mindbogglingly astounding. A German foreigner who lives on a continent with no laws prohibiting exotic species from crossing borders, has never used GAN or is a GAN farmer, has never reared or handled Solenopsis invicta and has never set foot on Texas soil and possibly even the US is lecturing a native Texan (who is an experienced GAN farmer) his expertise of Solenopsis invicta because he has a diploma from Google Search University.
You must believe when RIFAs fly, they carry a PDF map of the quarantine zone, lest they offend the feds?
Areas outside of the zone are already infested, such as Amarillo and Lubbock. This was ten years ago. Most likely worse now. Last year, someone from Katy was selling RIFAs for a wallet stealing five bucks. Closest city outside of quarantine is Lubbock. Drive from Lubbock to Katy is a good days, 8-9 hours just one way. The parents of the child would have to spend at least two days, lots of gas money, one nights lodging, and the $5 for those ants. Haha. No parent has ever driven their child more than 1 or 2 hours to buys ants. Firsthand GAN farmer experience. I get kids all the time begging to ship them ants because their parents wouldn't drive them.
"But is it still possible a parent would do this for their child!", you say. In a world of infinite possibilities, sure. Just like I can wake up tomorrow morning and win the MegaMillions lotto.
Also, lots of caps? Really? I made a single cap and that wasn't even related to GAN.
Yes, with lots of CAPS. You and I both know we're not just referring to this post. Not only do you attack GAN every chance you get, but have policed others halfway across the globe for illegal selling while inciting fellow forum users to take action and report them to the federal authorities and "take them out". Using Google and the Internet as your only evidence, you play judge jury and executioner and target people you've never met online (some of them just kids who don't know any better) who have done no harm to you. You make assumptions and innuendos to spread misinformation with no real firsthand evidence on any of your topics while sensationalizing and dramatizing everything. These kinds of posts do not belong on Formiculture.
This is all the more ironic that it comes from someone in Germany, a country that has absolutely zero border laws in transporting exotic ant species, who spends his waking hours policing others they've never met halfway around the globe in what they can and cannot do.
Shouldn't you be trying to change the border laws in Germany? Since you care so much about the environment?
I do in fact bother with the laws and while I'm not flat-out against keeping exotic ants I really don't see a point in shipping ants from Asia, America or Australia to Europe - but I'm more concerned about what the increasingly popular antkeeping hobby does to the natural environments and populations of those exotic ants (and about the casualties caused by the shipping due to poorly qualified people packing them into insufficient packages with the result of half the queens dying on the way) than the damage they could cause in Europe.
Europe (other than large parts of the US and Canada) is essentially to 100% a "culturified" environment, there is no actual real nature in Europe at all (except for the super cold northern parts which are essentially immune to invasive ants), all of it got routed out a thousand years ago by the ever-sprouting human population. None of the woods here are even remotely natural and even less so the meadows - literally EVERYTHING here is artificial.
Furthermore the low temperatures in central Europe easily wipe out any exotic ant populations that do not house within buildings or around district heating pipes - and any colony that could potentially survive in urban areas has a high chance of getting wiped out by the omnipresent Lasius niger which utterly dominates those urban bioms and is astonishingly effective at wiping out any potential competition. In fact the only dangerous invasive ant species in central Europe is the ominous Lasius neglectus (a supercolony-forming Lasius species that can survive the cold winter) which isn't even available for sale anywhere.
I'm fine with people keeping ants from southern Europe, like Messor barbarus, Camponotus cruentatus or Crematogaster scrutellaris - these ants have been available here for decades, they're in the mail for a week at most and there has never been any issue with them (also they can't survive the cold winter and if the climate actually changes to a point where they could survive they'd find their way here anyway, just like the Messor structor that can already be found in certain warm areas in western Germany and is actually considered a native species). But I really don't think we need Atta, Pogonomyrmex, Ponerines or Myrmecia in european households - ants that often traveled in the mail for weeks to reach Europe and require very specific climate conditions that are hard to replicate. And I'm definitely sure we do not need such ridiculousness as the super rare Dinoymyrmex gigas for 1500€, that's just beyond stupid.
So yes, I'd like to have a RATIONAL discussion about the sales of exotic ants in Germany - unfortunately there IS no rationality in this discussion. We only have the majority of people who don't really care (most of the population and most the scientific community) and on the other side a few people lead by a well-known individual from the scientific community who behaves like a fanatic evangelizing zealot completely opposing the sales and keeping of ANY non-native species (except for "responsible scientists" of course, those can keep whatever ants they want - which immediately tells you how hypocritical their claims are).
Maybe with the recent discussion about the current major insect extinction event (overall insect populations have decreased by 80% since 1990) an actual proper discussion about ants may arise as a by-product although I don't really think so as ants are probably the only insect family that isn't really affected by that major insect die-out (it's mostly a butterfly, bee and hoverfly problem) plus certain species like the hill-building wood ants of the Formica rufa/polyctena group are already protected (you cannot catch, keep, buy or sell them, even damaging their nests or displacing them from your garden is forbidden, so yes we do have some ant laws in Germany).
Not sure what your lengthy opinions on which species should or should not cross European borders has anything to do with the topic at hand because no one cares. I mentioned those nonexistent laws to show your hypocrisy and apparently it touched a nerve. Point is, you live in a nation where anyone can freely transport exotic species of ants across borders without consequence, and the US cannot.
Do you see any of us from the US hang out in European or German ant forums, policing them, enforcing our views, lecturing them about the environment, and constantly shaming them with border laws? No.
According to you, all of Europe is "essentially a 100% culturified environment and literally EVERYTHING is artificial" (haha what does any of that even mean?), which gives you guys a FREE PASS on transporting exotic species across borders. How much of Europe have you actually seen? (in real life, not google)
Not to brag or boast, but I've been to all parts of Europe - Madrid, the Alps, beaches of Nice and Cannes, Zurich, the UK, Florence, Paris, Venice, and even lived in Switzerland for a month. If all this is "100% culturified literally EVERYTHING is artificial", then using your logic I can equally say Dallas and Houston Texas are also "100% culturified literally EVERYTHING is artificial". Do we get a FREE PASS?
Look dude. You may have fooled many of the newer and younger members here into thinking your are an environmental angel who deeply cares about the what happens on the other side of world which you have never seen, but you don't fool me. Stop with the charade, OK?
Edited by nurbs, February 6 2018 - 5:55 PM.