Online Sales of Nurse Sharks are Shut Down.
The US Attorney's Office in Miami charged Dean
Trinh of Milpitas, CA, last month with buying
and selling juvenile nurse sharks illegally trapped
in the Florida Keys. Authorities say Florida Keys
resident Allan Wagner, who died before the case
reached court, harvested nurse shark pups from
lobster traps he placed in Florida waters in 2009,
then shipped them to California by commercial air
for further sale by Trinh, who operated a business
known as Aquatop USA in California and reportedly
advertised the sale of nurse sharks on websites
like eBay and Craigslist. Prosecutors believe the
men sold and transferred approximately 74 sharks.
Trinh, 43, faces 30 years in prison if convicted.
It's not determined yet whether he'll face trial in
California or Florida.
It's Chapter 7 for Diving Concepts. The drysuit
maker in Santa Barbara, CA, had a reputation of
service problems with its dealers and customers, so
it was not a total surprise that the company filed for
bankruptcy in April. After hearing a rising crescendo
of complaints about the company not replying to calls
or e-mails about drysuits sent in for repairs, the John
McKenzie of the dive news website ScubaGadget
found court records showing that Diving Concepts
filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, meaning it intends to
liquidate. Its assets are listed in the range of $100,000
to $500,000, while its liabilities are between $1 million
and $10 million. Diving Concepts' court-appointed
trustee is Jeremy W. Faith (his phone number is 818-
705-2777). For customers and dealers who have suits
in for repair, Faith says that if they contact him and
have "ironclad proof of ownership," they should be
able to get their drysuit returned. All other creditors
should hire a lawyer.
Learn How to Microdive. Now you can get certified
to dive all the way down to 10 feet! But only 10
feet. An English man named Rob Hart has created a
"Microdive" certification course that's being taught at
a few U.K. dive stores at a cost of $230. "Until now,
only people with the time, money and the commitment
to study for weeks to qualify to dive to 60 feet could
experience the wonders that lie below the surface of our
oceans," said Hart. "By removing the obstacles of time
and cost, it is now possible for anyone to dive if they
want to." He says the government-approved course
qualifies students to Microdive independently to 10 feet
anywhere in the world. Truth is, Hart's course is mainly
directed to people who want to scrub barnacles off their
boats, which hasn't got much to do with experiencing
"the wonders that lie below the surface." And I'm
shocked -- as I'm sure other American divers are -- that
PADI didn't think this up long ago.
Will Florida's New Lionfish Rules Help? At last,
the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
(FWC) have seen the light and lifted restrictions on
how many lionfish people can catch or kill. FWC
Spokeswoman Amanda Nalley told news station WZVN
in Fort Meyers, "What we did was allow folks to target
them without needing a recreational fish license
when using any spearing device or net geared toward
lionfish." The rules will also allow anglers and divers
to take as many of the invasive fish as they can." Prior
to the change, anglers and divers had a 100-pound
limit. That doesn't mean anything goes for spearfishers.
"The rules do not change where you can spearfish
currently," says Nalley. "All normal spearfishing rules
remain in place [in Florida counties]."After a decade of
the lionfish's lethal march down the Atlantic and into
the Caribbean, we're wondering why it took the FWC
so long to change its tune. The new rules are good news
-- but still, it's a Band-Aid on a problem that may be too
big for any government agency to ever control.