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  1. #1
    I am not obsessed.... GartersRock's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    Oh! Very nice!
    Amanda Tolleson

  2. #2
    Forum Moderator Stefan-A's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    Very nice indeed. Special.

  3. #3
    Truieneer, e ras apoat Snaky's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    That's a very nice flame
    Greetz, Hans

    Fear can hold you prisoner. Hope can set you free.
    -The Shawshank Redemption-
    www.kousebandslangen.nl

  4. #4
    the red sided giant reptileparadise's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    Very nice flame!
    Is she just fed, or is she just very fat?
    www.facebook.com/crazyreptiles
    welcome ( at ) crazyreptiles . eu

  5. #5
    Old and wise snake charles parenteau's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    Gravid shes so fat...she in my friend home for this summer,in my collection in august ,gonna show you more pic soon...

  6. #6
    Forum Moderator infernalis's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    She is a very pretty snake Charles.

  7. #7
    Adult snake brain's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    I can kind of see your point... but... do you keep other snakes?
    Yes, and most have been in separate habitats for over four years. This will be the first, for me, were I would have a community tank of 1.0 or 0.1’s. They are very rarelyhandled so I believe they don’t get stressed.
    If so, you automatically risk spreading anything your current snakes may be carrying and not showing to her just by contacting them, and then her or vice versa.
    As would any other hobbyist who collects wild snakes. I will ask … do you know of any concrete evident as to the demise or health issues of WC or the hobbyist’s collection of snakes by these “unknown pathogens”?
    So saying that you are never exposing her to anything bad (which I never did say, I believe) would be impossible since you would need a 100% sterile environment where you never ever contact her personally to be successful in zero exposure. Bacteria, viruses, fungi, and parasite eggs are all invisible to the naked eye, it's as simple as you mess around with another animal in your house (or out of it, for that matter) that happens to be carrying something and you automatically risk possibly, passing. Whether she would actually catch it, whether she fights it off, whether she carries it without showing it and then when she is released it wipes out a small population, that is all left to chance and unseen circumstances. To wonder about what real harm you are doing is perfectly okay, but to deny that there is a *posibility* of you causing it would be rather silly. Never say never!
    Yes I do agree the *possibility* does exist but I never stated that. I am only asking “is there concrete evidentance to the connection where by I would be introducing an “unknown pathogens” into the snake or area.
    The other major point of capturing, keeping, and then releasing a snake that people often miss is the amount of stress and confusion it puts the snak through. Stress lowers her immune system, causing her to be more susceptible to picking up things that she might normall fight off. When you set her free, she is obviously confused and even if you release her exactly where you found her, she is going to spend a good bit of time crawling around aimlessly trying to figure out what the heck is going on and that is the time where she is very likely to be eaten and thus you are in fact, reducing her chance to survive by a great deal by degradation of her immune system and mental health.
    This is a well noted point, I do agree the stress level is up in the critter as they see anything above their size as a predator thus the flight or fight instinct comes in.

    I am not saying I am for or against occasional capture and release; I am merely stating facts and offering some speculation and counterpoints to what you have brought up.

    Ty and I agree. It’s my contingency that these critters just did not just appear in our home habitats; they had to be collected from the wild, that being said this did not just happen yesterday either. So, I have not heard of a species being decimated by the “collection” of/or “health problems from unknown pathogens”. If this was the case I would surely be against the collection. What I am most concerned about the loss of natural habitat from man.

    This is true in many cases but certainly not all. Every color morph animal you see, originated from an animal that 99% of the time, was collected from the wild and was actually showing that trait and not just carrying it. Some color morphs, such as anery, melanistic, hypomelanistic, and even occasionally erythristic are actually beneficial at times and you can even find established populations of these individuals. I personally own an albino animal that was collected in the wild, the albino dekay's of course, and while that was a baby my other two wild caught morph animals were not. Scott felzer owns a BUNCH of astounding morph animals from the wild, many of which were adults at the time found. My hypo eastern, which is close in coloring to a t positive albino, was already an adult and gravid when I caught her. She stuck out SO bad in the grass and yet, she made it. I saw her from almost 40 feet away crawling through tall grass. My wild caught flame has a fluorescent red stripe that is about as inconspicuous as a traffic cone... she was a juvenile and she made it as well. Morphs do make it in the wild, not always, but if they didn't, we would never see them in the hobby!

    Those wild morphs have little chance hear in the NW as we have many raptors, Eagles, and the numerous hawks. Why even rats and my cats that their fair shares.
    Yes and I agree Mother Nature is constantly evolving (other wise we wouldn’t be here, sorry off subject). Those of the morph are adapting to their environment and we collect them as “pretties”. I commend those dedicated hobbyist like yourself and Scott who try to provide an alternative to our whims. The problem I see there is, “in every clutch/litter maybe one will be appealing, what happens to the other say 9 which are not”?
    Michael
    1.1 Woma (Sun Burst), 2.1 Eastern Blackneck, 3.3 Plains Garter, 3.1 Puget Sound,
    2.1 Granite Checker, 1.0 Brazilian Rainbow Boa (snake sitting )

  8. #8
    Adult snake brain's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    I’m not trying to start a range war here I just was wondering “if” anyone can provide concrete evidences one way or another. After that it will be my own decision and live with my conscience.

    This is what drives my actions. To collect or not to collect?
    Michael
    1.1 Woma (Sun Burst), 2.1 Eastern Blackneck, 3.3 Plains Garter, 3.1 Puget Sound,
    2.1 Granite Checker, 1.0 Brazilian Rainbow Boa (snake sitting )

  9. #9
    Forum Moderator Stefan-A's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    What exactly are you asking for? A list of cases where released or escaped animals have introduced diseases into the environment? When it comes to diseases that affect amphibians, Chytridiomycosis would be one such case and it's one with global consequences. It's just an example of such a case and like I said, there's no way for any of us to know what you could unwittingly spread to the wild population, or bring into the captive one. We're not clairvoyant. Unknown pathogen also refers to the fact that one doesn't necessarily know of its presence in the animal that's released. It could be a virus, a bacteria, a fungus, a prion disease, a protozoa, a parasite etc. How big the risk is may vary, but it doesn't ever go away and there are countless strands and even strands of normally harmless bacteria that may be deadly to other individuals of the same species or other species. One problem is that it's usually identified only after it's spread into a population where there's no resistance to it and when it is already wreaking havoc. So what are the consequences of not taking the risk?

  10. #10
    Forum Moderator aSnakeLovinBabe's Avatar
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    Re: Collecting Gravid Females.

    Quote Originally Posted by Stefan-A View Post
    What exactly are you asking for? A list of cases where released or escaped animals have introduced diseases into the environment? When it comes to diseases that affect amphibians, Chytridiomycosis would be one such case and it's one with global consequences. It's just an example of such a case and like I said, there's no way for any of us to know what you could unwittingly spread to the wild population, or bring into the captive one. We're not clairvoyant. Unknown pathogen also refers to the fact that one doesn't necessarily know of its presence in the animal that's released. It could be a virus, a bacteria, a fungus, a prion disease, a protozoa, a parasite etc. How big the risk is may vary, but it doesn't ever go away and there are countless strands and even strands of normally harmless bacteria that may be deadly to other individuals of the same species or other species. One problem is that it's usually identified only after it's spread into a population where there's no resistance to it and when it is already wreaking havoc. So what are the consequences of not taking the risk?
    Thank you, Stefan.
    Mother of many snakes and a beautiful baby girl! I am also a polymer clay artist!


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