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Old 06-25-13, 02:09 PM   #1
Amadeus
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What do you think of hybrids?

What are your thoughts or opinions on the recent python hybrids like the "burmball" or the "bateater"


Imo they shouldn't continue to be bred...

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Edit: This should be in the python forum but oh well.
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Old 06-25-13, 02:55 PM   #2
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

Not my cup of tea, but then neither are labradoodles. If someone wants a designer animal I say whatever. Maybe they need their own category, like faux-snake.
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Old 06-25-13, 03:09 PM   #3
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

I personally don't mind as long as those hybrid genes don't get mixed up into the general population. I'd put some regulations on that king of thing.
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Old 06-25-13, 03:12 PM   #4
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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Originally Posted by mikoh4792 View Post
I personally don't mind as long as those hybrid genes don't get mixed up into the general population. I'd put some regulations on that king of thing.
We can't regulate any part of our hobby, even the more dangerous venomous part and you think we could do hybrids? hahahahaha.


Bateaters aren't new but the albino burmball is new.

Neat looking but they all suck.
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Old 06-25-13, 03:16 PM   #5
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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Originally Posted by Amadeus View Post
Imo they shouldn't continue to be bred...
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Neat looking but they all suck.
can you qualify this a bit? would like to understand what the problem is from your perspective - as I said, to me its fascinating, both aesthetically and from a natural sciences perspective
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Old 06-25-13, 03:21 PM   #6
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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can you qualify this a bit? would like to understand what the problem is from your perspective - as I said, to me its fascinating, both aesthetically and from a natural sciences perspective
The problem is simple.

Best example is Australia.

Legally we can no longer import their animals. Such as jungle carpet pythons. We no longer have a gene pool, it's a gene puddle that's muddied by other animals like the "carpondro". For what purpose? For the sake of saying "I did it".

We will lose what nature gifted us for the sake of us being egotistical and wanting to play God.
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Old 06-25-13, 03:29 PM   #7
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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can you qualify this a bit? would like to understand what the problem is from your perspective - as I said, to me its fascinating, both aesthetically and from a natural sciences perspective
The biggest problem in my opinion is when species of animals or plants are altered and then get released (usually accidentally) back into native populations. The result is outbreeding depression, reduced vigor, breeding ability and survivorship.
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Old 06-25-13, 03:18 PM   #8
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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We can't regulate any part of our hobby, even the more dangerous venomous part and you think we could do hybrids? hahahahaha.
What do you mean by this? How does regulation not work for venomous reptiles?(Serious question)
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Old 06-25-13, 03:22 PM   #9
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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What do you mean by this? How does regulation not work for venomous reptiles?(Serious question)
Simple, there is no regulation or extremely little or relaxed. Florida has it but doesn't mean it's not abused or ignored.

I can go and buy a venomous snake right now if I wanted to. No one would stop me. It's only against a local by-law so as long as no one said anything I could keep it forever.
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Old 06-25-13, 03:13 PM   #10
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

hybrids exist in nature, they are part of the evolution of species, saying they shouldnt exist is bizare.

You also wouldnt have for eg, the beef in your burgers, or the milk in your coffee, or the wheat in your cereal, or...well you get the picture...if it wasnt for hybrids, selective cross breeding between species and sub species

I find the whole thing fascinating personally.

As for 'letting them out into the general population' - yes, but this should apply to any capitive breed species, cross bred or not, and espcially into countries where they are not native
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Old 06-25-13, 03:18 PM   #11
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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hybrids exist in nature, they are part of the evolution of species, saying they shouldnt exist is bizare.

You also wouldnt have for eg, the beef in your burgers, or the milk in your coffee, or the wheat in your cereal, or...well you get the picture...if it wasnt for hybrids, selective cross breeding between species and sub species

I find the whole thing fascinating personally.

As for 'letting them out into the general population' - yes, but this should apply to any capitive breed species, cross bred or not, and espcially into countries where they are not native
Hybrids don't really exist in the wild. Natural intergrades do though. We have imaginary lines that animals don't know about and cross them on a regular basis. If it's caught in one such imaginary boundary than it's labeled as that.

Hybrids that are an animal from Africa (ball python) and another from Australia (Woma python) are not natural and would never occur. I don't see how that is evolution when it never could happen.
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Old 06-25-13, 03:27 PM   #12
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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Originally Posted by Aaron_S View Post
Hybrids don't really exist in the wild. Natural intergrades do though. We have imaginary lines that animals don't know about and cross them on a regular basis. If it's caught in one such imaginary boundary than it's labeled as that.

Hybrids that are an animal from Africa (ball python) and another from Australia (Woma python) are not natural and would never occur. I don't see how that is evolution when it never could happen.
It depends on what you consider natural. I find it natural that with our brain capacity we can choose to breed different types of animals together to create hybrids. Just because they don't do it on their own out in the wild doesn't make it unnatural.
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Old 06-25-13, 04:01 PM   #13
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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Originally Posted by mikoh4792 View Post
It depends on what you consider natural. I find it natural that with our brain capacity we can choose to breed different types of animals together to create hybrids. Just because they don't do it on their own out in the wild doesn't make it unnatural.
That's actually the definition of unnatural.

Our nice, cozy sterile environments are NOT natural. We mimic natural parameters but doesn't make it natural.

Our "brain capacity" your talking about is just our arrogance.

Would you care how breeding two species who have evolved for their own habitats together creates "evolution" as you stated? I don't see how that's evolving considering patterns and colours have a lot to do with natural habitat and their survival.
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Old 06-25-13, 04:06 PM   #14
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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Originally Posted by Aaron_S View Post
That's actually the definition of unnatural.

Our nice, cozy sterile environments are NOT natural. We mimic natural parameters but doesn't make it natural.

Our "brain capacity" your talking about is just our arrogance.

Would you care how breeding two species who have evolved for their own habitats together creates "evolution" as you stated? I don't see how that's evolving considering patterns and colours have a lot to do with natural habitat and their survival.
I never said anything about evolving. I just find it natural that humans want to toy around with nature.

We tend to separate ourselves from nature but in actuality our cozy sterile environments are natural. We create these environments like beavers make dens, and ants make ant hills. Our system is just more complex and advanced.

You can not seriously think our brain capacity is just our arrogance. We are smarter than other animals. I don't mean to point out the obvious.
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Old 06-25-13, 04:00 PM   #15
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Re: What do you think of hybrids?

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Originally Posted by Aaron_S View Post
Hybrids don't really exist in the wild. Natural intergrades do though. We have imaginary lines that animals don't know about and cross them on a regular basis. If it's caught in one such imaginary boundary than it's labeled as that.

Hybrids that are an animal from Africa (ball python) and another from Australia (Woma python) are not natural and would never occur. I don't see how that is evolution when it never could happen.
hybridisation has nothing to do with where an animal comes from - the most obvious example is the As-s (scuse the hiphen, forum is filtering the word lol), which is found frequently in the wild, fish are another group of animals which often hybridise naturally, the list of natural hybrids is endless, sometimes they are able to reproduce and if well adapted will form their own species or sub species as time goes on
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