Hopefully this changes soon though. This species needs really decayed wood to even reproduce in; females can't enter harder wood like long-horned beetles could. Long-horned beetles are the real problem that USDA/APHIS should be worrying about, not most Dynastinae. Tell me this, do you really think a larvae of this species could survive outside in the cold winter months in the east coast? They live in a warm climate and there's no way adults could reproduce under harsh conditions. Even if USDA/APHIS thinks you were to release them outside because you got sick of keeping them, that's unrealistic. If a hobbyist is going to pay a HUGE sum of money to keep something he/she finds amazing, why would they just get rid of it like that? Major live pairs could go up to 550 USD. If anything, they should limit the keeping of this species to Florida which almost anything could survive. And yes, we all know the coconut rhinoceros beetle is a problem but that's just one particular species. Dynastes hercules hercules does not pose a threat to the environment in my opinion.