
On a recent visit to Lei Yue Mun, I was shocked to find one seafood stall with two agitated and very juvenile blacktip reef sharks swimming in their own tank.
This display was a first for me.
The reality that these immature creatures were destined for someone's table is surely a new and sinister development, ensuring the extinction of this apex predator will probably occur faster than anticipated.
Their mindless capture prevents any chance of reproduction, and the fact they were in plain view for all to see makes you wonder if it is time to start policing what is on offer.
You published a damning exposé on the unbridled consumption on the mainland of numerous "protected" land-based species ("In the market for a taste of the wild", December 12) and I have to question if the appearance of live sharks in our seafood stalls is pandering to visitors' demands.
We recently had the alarming report of thousands of shark fins drying on a rooftop, as well as the reported record HK$13.7 million paid for a single endangered bluefin tuna ("Record smashed as tuna price scales new heights", January 6).