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  1. #1
    The red side of life. zooplan's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    I guessed so

    On German fairs it is forbidden to offer any gravid or ill animals.
    Allready waiting for the sommer
    best wishes bis bald Udo
    Breeding Redsides EGSA-Chairman

  2. #2
    Forum Moderator infernalis's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    I wish that were true here in the US.

    One reason why I have a hard time at shows, is the blatant disregard for life.

    I would likely get arrested if I were to step up to the "wrong" table.

  3. #3
    Old and wise snake KITKAT's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    OK... an ethics question...

    A garter hobbyist collects a gravid female, feeds her and successfully keeps her until she drops her offspring.

    The female is then released where she was found.

    The offspring are all fed at least once, the garter hobbyist keeps four offspring, and releases all others, near where the gravid mother was found.

    Fair or foul???
    KitKat
    "Acts of kindness should never be random."

  4. #4
    Forum Moderator infernalis's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    Quote Originally Posted by KITKAT View Post
    OK... an ethics question...

    A garter hobbyist collects a gravid female, feeds her and successfully keeps her until she drops her offspring.

    The female is then released where she was found.

    The offspring are all fed at least once, the garter hobbyist keeps four offspring, and releases all others, near where the gravid mother was found.

    Fair or foul???
    that question has 2 answers

  5. #5
    Old and wise snake KITKAT's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    Quote Originally Posted by dekaybrown View Post
    that question has 2 answers
    and they are???
    KitKat
    "Acts of kindness should never be random."

  6. #6
    Forum Moderator aSnakeLovinBabe's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    Fair in my opinion!

    Now, collecting a gravid female "just because" is not really very ethical at all. But- what about those females that we find that are abnormally patterned that just happen to be gravid at the time they are found?!

    take my hypo from last year, for instance... she was gravid upon her capture.

    And, the flame I found last weekend is not gravid, shes far too young, but at the same time... what would the opinion be if she had been? I still would have kept her! I find her to be quite a great find, because she can introduce a brand new bloodline and fresh genetics into the flame world. I will cross her with my flame male from Scott, for genetically fresh flames.

    And as a last note, I am sure it's already been stated, but anyone in the hobby who is 100% against any form of WC animal needs to take a look at what they are saying. All of our snakes are descendants of WC snakes, and the ONLY way to GUARANTEE adding fresh genetics to your groups would be from the occasional WC snake. If you think you've found a new "morph", or a new line of an existing one, breeding out that WC individual is the only way to know. I know that you can get others from other breeders, but how will we be certain that they are not distantly related? I and many of us have seen the effects of inbreeding, especially in the Albino Checkered Garter snake.
    Mother of many snakes and a beautiful baby girl! I am also a polymer clay artist!


  7. #7
    Forum Moderator Stefan-A's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    Quote Originally Posted by aSnakeLovinBabe View Post
    And as a last note, I am sure it's already been stated, but anyone in the hobby who is 100% against any form of WC animal needs to take a look at what they are saying. All of our snakes are descendants of WC snakes, and the ONLY way to GUARANTEE adding fresh genetics to your groups would be from the occasional WC snake.
    The occasional WC snake. Most haven't even been inbred long enough to justify WC for that reason. It's simply unnecessary.

    But I would like to add that aberrant snakes tend to have poor chances of survival anyway.

  8. #8
    Forum Moderator aSnakeLovinBabe's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    Quote Originally Posted by Stefan-A View Post
    But I would like to add that aberrant snakes tend to have poor chances of survival anyway.
    in the wild, most certainly.

    My hypo stood out like a sore thumb in the grass.... when matched up to the rock pile she was darting for though... she actually matched the light sandy rocks quite well, and all the dark snakes tended to stick out!

    Guess that's why she was doing so well
    Mother of many snakes and a beautiful baby girl! I am also a polymer clay artist!


  9. #9
    Forum Moderator Stefan-A's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    Quote Originally Posted by KITKAT View Post
    OK... an ethics question...

    A garter hobbyist collects a gravid female, feeds her and successfully keeps her until she drops her offspring.

    The female is then released where she was found.

    The offspring are all fed at least once, the garter hobbyist keeps four offspring, and releases all others, near where the gravid mother was found.

    Fair or foul???
    Foul.

    What are the positive aspects? The babies were given a meal that they could just as easily have gotten in the wild. That meal was given in exchange for a loss of four individuals and reduced chances for survival for both the female and the offspring, as indicated by the limited research that has been done on the survival of relocated and released snakes. Not to mention whatever impact the stress on the female might have had on the offspring, and who knows what impact the first meal could have had on the offspring's food preferences once released. And of course there's always the risk that a disease could be spread from captive snakes to wild ones.

    It just seems to me that the drawbacks outweigh the benefits.

  10. #10
    The red side of life. zooplan's Avatar
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    Re: A disturbing trend, really disturbing

    Quote Originally Posted by KITKAT View Post
    OK... an ethics question...
    Fair or foul???
    Fair
    but fairer if the offspring was fed twice or more times.
    To take aberrant specimen could be worse, beacuse they might be the future of the population.
    On the other hand are resessive alleles common within a genpool before they occur in phenotypes.
    At this point we are back to the r and K-species, Stefan, but I canīt find the thread at the moment.
    Allready waiting for the sommer
    best wishes bis bald Udo
    Breeding Redsides EGSA-Chairman

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