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Old 06-22-12, 09:18 AM   #1
limey
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Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

This en-masse catching of wild hatchlings for the pet trade is kind of sad isn't it?

I just know from volunteering in various worldwide conservation efforts over the years that human numbers are skyrocketing while most others species' numbers are dwindling...

What's your opinion of "wild caught"?
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Old 06-22-12, 09:22 AM   #2
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

I would never buy wild caught.
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Old 06-24-12, 08:11 AM   #3
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

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I would never buy wild caught.
I want to clarify why i wouldn't buy wild caught. I bought a possible wild caught boa years ago. The guy at the pet store wasn't sure which boas were CB and which were WC. Well it turn out it had IBD and it wiped out my entire collection. I would never again risk the safety of the snakes i already own. I would go without rather than buy a WC. That's just me.

Do WC have a place in the reptile business? Most diffidently. With out them we wouldn't have the CB snake that are readily available now days. They find new morph all the time, but at the same time something need to be do to replace what is being taking from the wild. If it wasn't for WC and pet store reptiles wouldn't be so easy to obtain and most of us would own them ,or even be on a snake site having this debate. So as much as we might not like it it serves a purpose.
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Old 06-22-12, 09:58 AM   #4
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

[Looking around for the popcorn-eating emoticon, waiting for the debate to begin]
-----

It's easy to have that mentality, and I'm not necessarily knocking the philosophy behind it. After all, who isn't for conservation, right?

But realistically, its not a very cut-and-dry issue, when you consider really how commonly-kept herps are in the pet trade: Chinese water dragons, savannah monitors, African fat-tailed geckos, tokay geckos, blue-tongued skinks, uromastyx, Russian tortoises, and of course, baby ball pythons, just to mention a few.

Its nice that people make the decision to "never buy WC" but when you think about, that really limits your options for expanding your collection, especially if you're on a budget. How many people you know breed savannah monitors in captivity? tokay geckos? Russian tortoises? I know there are some, but CBB animals are often double the price you'd pay for a WC one. A lot of newbies are either unwilling to pony up the extra dough or more often than not, are completely unaware CBB is even an option. The latter, I'm mainly referring to the average Jill or Joe who walks into Petco and sees a savannah monitor or water dragon. They may not even have a clue of the submerged iceberg they're standing on that represents the captive reptile industry.

A lot of animals are still only available (mostly) through wildcuaght collection and importation because they are either very difficult to reproduce, or there is marketability in reproducing them in captivity. For example, for most dealers, it is cheaper to order a crate load of WC tokay geckos than go to the effort of breeding the things. I'm not saying its right; I'm merely pointing out the reality of the situation.

In short, if the tides are really going to turn, you're going to have to convince every single person out there remotely interested in keeping herps to only buy from captive bred stock. Personally, I feel this is unrealistic and futile goal.
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Old 06-22-12, 10:02 AM   #5
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

What I DO have a problem with is the quote-unquote "trash" species that are overcollected and sold that most people are ill-equiped to keep. Last year, I saw an ad for someone selling crowned snakes by the lot. For those unfamiliar, crowned snakes are tiny little worm-like snakes here in North America that hardy get larger than a pencil. Their natural diet is centipedes. This guy was peddling these drab brown tiny snakes, claiming they were the cheapest snake you could ever get and that they make great pets. I mean, how is the average person gonna feed this snake? Who has a ready supply of centipedes?

This was on Fauna, BTW.
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Old 06-22-12, 10:08 AM   #6
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

Yeah. I think you have a point there. And no one person can change the world's opinion - it's too mammoth a task.

But I also think (and I'm sure many of you would agree with me) that from my observations, humans tend to be a very self-serving species. And if we don't make much needed changes, then in the long run (though perhaps not in our lifetime) the homosapiens species is doomed.
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Old 06-22-12, 10:59 AM   #7
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

Quote:
Originally Posted by limey View Post
Yeah. I think you have a point there. And no one person can change the world's opinion - it's too mammoth a task.

But I also think (and I'm sure many of you would agree with me) that from my observations, humans tend to be a very self-serving species. And if we don't make much needed changes, then in the long run (though perhaps not in our lifetime) the homosapiens species is doomed.
In the long-run the sun will burn out and all species on Earth which weren't able to build rockets are doomed. So relatively speaking "the homo-sapiens species" is doing alright...
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Old 06-22-12, 11:50 AM   #8
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

The wild caught v captive bred argument is bogus really,as everything we now have in captivity was bred from W/C stock,so for us to get pious about W/C is a not really on,having said that most of the pythons and Boas were originally caught for the skin trade with the reptile or pet trade as a by-product so you could say that if we did not have them they were died,l do agree that with your story about mass importing very cheap reps with a highly specialised food intake is very irresponsible and could be stopped,but l think there still is a case for importing reps responsibly
your thoughts
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Old 06-25-12, 06:36 AM   #9
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

Quote:
Originally Posted by limey View Post
Yeah. I think you have a point there. And no one person can change the world's opinion - it's too mammoth a task.

But I also think (and I'm sure many of you would agree with me) that from my observations, humans tend to be a very self-serving species. And if we don't make much needed changes, then in the long run (though perhaps not in our lifetime) the homosapiens species is doomed.

We are self serving & We are doomed....

What about habitat destruction?? There are species vanishing from this planet that have not even been discovered yet, but the oil / gas drilling & mining companies are not going to go bankrupt avoiding environmental impact.
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Old 06-25-12, 09:49 AM   #10
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

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We are self serving & We are doomed....

What about habitat destruction?? There are species vanishing from this planet that have not even been discovered yet, but the oil / gas drilling & mining companies are not going to go bankrupt avoiding environmental impact.
This is one of the "exceptions" I'm speaking of. Perfect example being the San Francisco Garter. If they went and caught a swack of these out of the WILD, and gave them to responsible, knowledgable breeders like you Wayne, maybe we could save the sub-species as a whole. That is an exception that I can't ignore.

Then, like I mentioned before, the first Palmetto Corn was a WC male, which brought a beautiful new morph into an already domesticised species, of which we are all well aware of the care needs.

I am not saying I support the wholesale capture, shipment and sale of WC snakes, but like I said, the sky is not always blue, and there are exceptions to each and every rule, except that we all have to die one day.
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Old 06-26-12, 11:45 AM   #11
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

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Originally Posted by infernalis View Post
We are self serving & We are doomed....

What about habitat destruction?? There are species vanishing from this planet that have not even been discovered yet, but the oil / gas drilling & mining companies are not going to go bankrupt avoiding environmental impact.
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Old 06-22-12, 11:57 AM   #12
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

"back in the day"......wild caught used to be all we could really find. I remember buying a wc Texas Indigo about 30 yrs ago. Completely parasite ridden, and despite the vets attempts, it died about 3 wks later (not much help w regard to exotic veterinarians at that time either).

There are so many captive bred options now wild caught is not even on my radar. I'm grateful to the "pioneers" who have successfully bred these wild caught stocks into a sustainable and plentiful source.

Ymmv
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Old 06-22-12, 12:09 PM   #13
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

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Originally Posted by MDT View Post
"back in the day"......wild caught used to be all we could really find. I remember buying a wc Texas Indigo about 30 yrs ago. Completely parasite ridden, and despite the vets attempts, it died about 3 wks later (not much help w regard to exotic veterinarians at that time either).

There are so many captive bred options now wild caught is not even on my radar. I'm grateful to the "pioneers" who have successfully bred these wild caught stocks into a sustainable and plentiful source.

Ymmv
l agree totally,back then it was 70-30% the rep would die,but the hobby had to start somewhere,the problem we have now is that the (colour morphers) have ruined most of the true lines,so that there are no pure lines that breed true, plus all the intergades,l still think that we still need small scale imports,l'm not talking about large scale mass importing of cheap disposable reps,on that l agree with you
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Old 06-22-12, 12:30 PM   #14
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

I think there is a place for the wild caught animals in the hobby. It is definitely over done for a boat load of species out there. I personally feel that wild caught animals should be used to establish captive stock so the species doesn't have to get to the point of being over collected.

I do realize that its always going to happen because people will always buy the cheaper animal (new people to the hobby anyway). Maybe it wouldn't be a horrible idea to put some stricter regulations on numbers imported, etc. Like do we really need to bring in thousands of baby ball pythons every year? Are there not enough breeders of ball pythons to cover the needs of everybody that wants a ball python? At the same time, I want to get a couple of species into my collection eventually that I know will have to be wild caught. I would consider that so I could establish captive stock so wild caught individuals wouldn't continue to get collected.

At the end of the day, all of are animals started in the wild and someone collected them and bred them. Like mentioned above, its not a cut and dry issue.
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Old 06-22-12, 06:21 PM   #15
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Re: Wild caught for pet shops, a tragedy?

Quote:
Originally Posted by StudentoReptile View Post
[Looking around for the popcorn-eating emoticon, waiting for the debate to begin]
-----

It's easy to have that mentality, and I'm not necessarily knocking the philosophy behind it. After all, who isn't for conservation, right? Conservation is not my reason to never do wild cauht. CBB gernerally is healthier all the way around.

But realistically, its not a very cut-and-dry issue, when you consider really how commonly-kept herps are in the pet trade: Chinese water dragons, savannah monitors, African fat-tailed geckos, tokay geckos, blue-tongued skinks, uromastyx, Russian tortoises, and of course, baby ball pythons, just to mention a few. Its nice that people make the decision to "never buy WC" but when you think about, that really limits your options for expanding your collection, especially if you're on a budget. How many people you know breed savannah monitors in captivity? tokay geckos? Russian tortoises? I know there are some, but CBB animals are often double the price you'd pay for a WC one. A lot of newbies are either unwilling to pony up the extra dough or more often than not, are completely unaware CBB is even an option. The latter, I'm mainly referring to the average Jill or Joe who walks into Petco and sees a savannah monitor or water dragon. They may not even have a clue of the submerged iceberg they're standing on that represents the captive reptile industry. I keep none of those so it doesnt change my opinion in the least. All of my snakes are cbb and I will always be resolved to never do wild caught.

A lot of animals are still only available (mostly) through wildcuaght collection and importation because they are either very difficult to reproduce, or there is marketability in reproducing them in captivity. These animals are not for me. For example, for most dealers, it is cheaper to order a crate load of WC tokay geckos than go to the effort of breeding the things. I'm not saying its right; I'm merely pointing out the reality of the situation. I agree that reality exists but again, these animals are not for me. My choice.

In short, if the tides are really going to turn, you're going to have to convince every single person out there remotely interested in keeping herps to only buy from captive bred stock. Personally, I feel this is unrealistic and futile goal. Im not out to convince the world and Im not desirous of any debate. Im just here expressing my opinion and thats as far as it goes.
Quote:
Originally Posted by UwabamiReptiles View Post
I think there is a place for the wild caught animals in the hobby. It is definitely over done for a boat load of species out there. I personally feel that wild caught animals should be used to establish captive stock so the species doesn't have to get to the point of being over collected. I agree with this. I also think that the cbb reptiles out there got their start generations back from wild caught but now that there are cbb stock to choose from, its better to stick with that.

I do realize that its always going to happen because people will always buy the cheaper animal (new people to the hobby anyway). Maybe it wouldn't be a horrible idea to put some stricter regulations on numbers imported, etc. Like do we really need to bring in thousands of baby ball pythons every year? Not a good enough reason for more regs. The last thing we need is the government to get more involved with even more restrictions. Are there not enough breeders of ball pythons to cover the needs of everybody that wants a ball python? Yes there are. At the same time, I want to get a couple of species into my collection eventually that I know will have to be wild caught. I would consider that so I could establish captive stock so wild caught individuals wouldn't continue to get collected. This will continue the demand for more wild caught animals.

At the end of the day, all of are animals started in the wild and someone collected them and bred them. Agreed and the above mentioned point thats been made applies here as well. Like mentioned above, its not a cut and dry issue. It is for me. No wild caught for me, not now, not ever.
Again, this is just my 2c worth. My opinions and not applicable as fact. This is just what I think about this.
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