I am certainly not encouraging it. But do it at the individual's own risk.Is it legal to own one? That is my only concern...not the availability. Sure, everything is okay until you get caught. Would you take the risk of being fined or put in prison for a plant? It only needs one agent who decides to take on the case for whatever reason, like you are too happy...
Be careful if you own one here in U.S.......just saying.
It's illegal to posses a CITES apx1 species or even a part of a species without a permit from USFW. Applies equally to plants and animals. Just because they are not enforcing the law today for certain species doesn't mean they won't tomorrow.Is it legal to own one? That is my only concern...not the availability. Sure, everything is okay until you get caught. Would you take the risk of being fined or put in prison for a plant? It only needs one agent who decides to take on the case for whatever reason, like you are too happy...
Be careful if you own one here in U.S.......just saying.
I saw it in a Fb group online. I’ve asked her what country she’s in, to see if it’s US. She’s not responded.legally here?
However, if country A issues a valid CITIES export permit for rungsuryanum, and a proper import is in place here in the US, and USDA allows the plant into the country, then it is legal here. This is apparently what happened twice that I know of, as plants were being openly sold at the Tamiami show and at Redlands. Thus, the Lacy act is not applicable since the exporting country and the US legally allowed the plant to move across borders and there is no way to determine if the plant was nursery raised. There are thousands of seed raised rungsuryanum in Thailand, as well as flowering size plants of dozens of primary hybrids. We have all seen the photos. There is nothing illegal about that.It's illegal to posses a CITES apx1 species or even a part of a species without a permit from USFW. Applies equally to plants and animals. Just because they are not enforcing the law today for certain species doesn't mean they won't tomorrow.
On top of CITES is the Lacy Act requirement holding the American purchaser responsible for any law broken broken by anyone in the supply chain of the species.
ruIs it legal to own one? That is my only concern...not the availability. Sure, everything is okay until you get caught. Would you take the risk of being fined or put in prison for a plant? It only needs one agent who decides to take on the case for whatever reason, like you are too happy...
Be careful if you own one here in U.S.......just saying.
"and there is no way to determine if the plant was nursery raised"? Wouldn't that cast doubt on the validity of a CITES certificate indicating the plants were legally artificially propagated?However, if country A issues a valid CITIES export permit for rungsuryanum, and a proper import is in place here in the US, and USDA allows the plant into the country, then it is legal here. This is apparently what happened twice that I know of, as plants were being openly sold at the Tamiami show and at Redlands. Thus, the Lacy act is not applicable since the exporting country and the US legally allowed the plant to move across borders and there is no way to determine if the plant was nursery raised. There are thousands of seed raised rungsuryanum in Thailand, as well as flowering size plants of dozens of primary hybrids. We have all seen the photos. There is nothing illegal about that.
This part is important for Americans....It's not like every plant have a CITES certificate associated with it, like each plant with the QR code for the CITES cert. More importantly, if someone wants to sell an illegal plant, they can print and fake a CITES certificate so the plants look like they are artificially propagated. Do vendors provide the CITES certificate for plants? My experience is many of them do not.
Again not encourage obtaining plants that are illegal.
But raising the question - how do you know your plants are artificially propagated or illegal picked, raised, then sold? The reality is that we can't and it near impossible to identify. Not saying regulation should be abandoned because regulation is needed to ensure ethnically raised plants, but we as consumers rely on the vendors transparency and not all vendors are transparent and always ethical because making a profit in the competitive world of orchid sales is very difficult.
Rude? You have "no idea"!Holds t
ru
That is not smart to make a public announcement! Where is the snitch?Holds true for hybrids, too. I have a rungsurianum x fairianum cross…it’s gorgeous but it stays in the greenhouse.
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