Aussie Pythons & Snakes Forum

Help Support Aussie Pythons & Snakes Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Status
Not open for further replies.
cordylus and megrim,
Not at all. It dosnt stress me one bit. I just feel sorry for the way the hobby is heading with all this crossing going on and the mess it will create in the future. I also feel sorry for new people getting into the hobby that are trying to keep species pure, as someone said alot of them will have a hard time.
I have a closed collection so it wont affect me at all.
As for sales, except for hypo coastals, bredli and cowley jungles i dont bother with any other morelia forms/sub-species. So it means jack to me.
Most of what i breed is pre-sold before it hatches every year.
 
Looks like some of the big, locale specific breeders might have to look into keeping records of where their snakes are going for the sake of the buyers and themselves. Easy enough for me to whack 'true blue line hypo coastals' on a snake and flog it off if no records have been kept and no one can prove otherwise. How about come certificates of authenticity? :lol:

Locale specific for me, no matter what the taxonomists do i know what i have.
Jordan
 
Looks like some of the big, locale specific breeders might have to look into keeping records of where their snakes are going for the sake of the buyers and themselves. Easy enough for me to whack 'true blue line hypo coastals' on a snake and flog it off if no records have been kept and no one can prove otherwise. How about come certificates of authenticity? :lol:

Locale specific for me, no matter what the taxonomists do i know what i have.
Jordan

.. then then zee master race for the snake?

DSC03674_1-1.jpg


Too much line breeding will end up causing the snakes in captivity to become as messed up as pedigree dogs and that will be a great shame especially if you look at how they have changed for the worse over the last 100 years

Sometimes you must let the ugly snakes make love to your good looking snakes as this is what happens in the wild - although I have spoken to a few of your keepers who dont think twice about borrowing a wild snake to mate their females which introduces fresh blood back into the captive gene pool which although most likely is illegal it is maybe not such a bad idea.
 
I guess it then comes down to reputation, as that always carries a lot of weight. Which in this case is a very good thing!

Zac.

PMSL......anyone for a "hypo" jungle?? :lol::lol:

Thank god there are still some breeders with credibility and reputation left...that actually do carry some weight. I know for one, i'll buy from them next time!
 
Last edited:
How about come certificates of authenticity? :lol:

I'm sure there would be numerous problems implementing such a system, but I still think it might be beneficial.

From what I've gathered, this country has had changes as to taxonomy, how accurate and far back do records go in terms of defining what is 'pure' and able to be registered in the first place?, and would the current state-run system make this complicated?
 
Phatto1 and Zobo, posts 449 and 457 show a pair of different "morphs" I took the photo of the dead hypo a couple of nights ago. It is just a normal Coastal from around here. Sadly its died from dunlop disease.

MattE, nice snake. Similar to those we find around here too.
 
Phatto1 and Zobo, posts 449 and 457 show a pair of different "morphs" I took the photo of the dead hypo a couple of nights ago. It is just a normal Coastal from around here. Sadly its died from dunlop disease.

MattE, nice snake. Similar to those we find around here too.
It is sad to see the dreaded dunlop disease, and yes I ahve seen many morphs/hypo's in the wild we get them at home all the time, it's the tri stripes i have never seen in the wild, nor have I seen pics of them in the wild. People always post pics of their snakes they find, wether it benight tigers, bhp's, normal or other coastals, and the list goes on, but never a tri stripe coastal/jungle etc!;)
 
It is sad to see the dreaded dunlop disease, and yes I ahve seen many morphs/hypo's in the wild we get them at home all the time, it's the tri stripes i have never seen in the wild, nor have I seen pics of them in the wild. People always post pics of their snakes they find, wether it benight tigers, bhp's, normal or other coastals, and the list goes on, but never a tri stripe coastal/jungle etc!;)


I usually don't post photos on here because I rarely take them. From what you said before I thought you didn't see any "morphs" not just tri stripes.

Photos of the hypos you've seen or didn't it happen. :)

Kris.
 
Hi all,

I have been reading this thread daily from day 1.

I have sat on the fence for most of this, reading, learning, and wondering where I stand on this issue.

The Hybrids we have seen are justifiably beautiful animals as well as the pure forms including line breeding.

I always look at both sides of an argument and try to be open to all people’s comments, before I make a judgment or decision.

As far as line breeding goes this is all well and good providing no disease or unacceptable traits (e.g. health issues/ genetic issues) are continued and I am sure many people bring in an animal from time to time to provide a mix to the bloodlines providing they are from the same subspecies or locality.

Unfortunately a hybrid of subspecies or in particular species is a mongrel or muddy as others have put it unless it has occurred naturally in the wild. This is the FACT.

Saying all this I believe it comes down to 1 thing. And this is the character of the person who is breeding these animals.

I would like to draw a similarity to being an Australian, and I will try and explain this best I can in the time I have.

As an Australian I am proud, ozzie ozzie ozzie, oh, oh oh. We are culturally different and I am sure most of you are extremely proud and get goose bumps from time to time when the Aussie anthem is played or if you are overseas and Here I come from a land downunder song comes on and you sing it out aloud and proud.

When it comes to flora and fauna we are unique. We have so many organizations in this country trying to protect wilderness areas we deserve to be protected, i.e. Steve Irwin foundation buying huge chunks of land and protecting it, Animal carers helping bushfire koalas or kangaroos etc, green peace trying to do the global thing, climate change organisations, cleanup Australia day, coral reefs dying, whales being slaughtered by the Japanese, the Amazon or Asian rainforests burning, the poor orangutans loosing their forests, frog species declining at rapid rates, protection of the great white shark, highland gorillas and the list goes on. And what do we normally see. The hard work by others trying to protect this, trying to say to others enough is enough we must protect this. Well this week I heard the highland gorillas have had a bumper year and conceived many babies, how many years and hard work has this been to see an increase of really, just a couple of handfuls.

Well what are they trying to protect? The future for us, our children and our children’s children and so on. Shouldn’t this be the same for our natural Australian wildlife?

I believe it comes down to us, yes you, me, and the person next to you or the bloke on APS you chat with from time to time. We have the responsibility to protect our country’s beliefs.

This leaves us with what do we want to protect in respect to our reptiles in Australia?

I believe we need to respect what is here and protect it. And this includes protecting it from hybridization unless it occurs naturally in the wild. And I don’t want to hear the same old rubbish of, oh they are in captivity. No chance of being in the wild, or how do people loose a python.

I am sure if you all dig deep to what is right for the future, then you would honestly have to say it is, keep it clean as possible as nature intended. Thus bringing us back to the character of the person who is breeding the animal.

In reflecting upon this, I suppose you need to view what the government (the people we have appointed to protect and govern what we want and expect). Obviously it’s the relevant Wildlife department in your state and/or federal department. We pay licenses for. What? Mainly the import/export or transferring of native animals from or within your state and protection from illegal exports or imports. Why do they license to protect this? To prevent disease and the introduction of pests, which will destroy our natives.

Well throw me down and beat me with a stick because that is exactly what hybridization is. The introduction of species or new subspecies in OUR country. (trying to be patriotic with OUR ) Do the majority of Australians want this? No. Then why is the B.L.O.O.D.Y relevant government department not doing something about this NOW.

You know why? Because we as a community, are sitting back just going with the flow, it will be ok, that is the norm.
Well let me say this. If there was ever a time for all of us to make a stand and say No to this it is NOW. Not in two or five year’s time, by then it will be too big and too many mud bloods out there to stop it.
If the government departments crack down on this NOW, there is a chance that the majority of our country’s population has its say on where it wants its native animal population to be, whether in captivity or not.

What we need is for the Herp societies and all other people, including you, me, and those who have been in the industry for many years and in particular a person to stand up and be the spokesperson for the cause. Unless we are heard as a community in mass, it will continue to next year and the year after, and by then unfortunately it will be too late, and we will stand here and say,



Why wasn’t something more done?



In 7 days since this thread has been started there has been 472 posts and an amazing 19238 views

To the Moderators please do not delete this thread as we live in a country that prides itself on free speech and the ability to debate such an issue.
People who want to contact me and move forward on this, please do so as I believe there is an overwhelming majority and chance to do something now.
 
Last edited:
Not everyone takes a picture of every wild snake they see and post it on a forum a few hours later.

There is no comparison to a wild snake and a designer morph, wild snake is what a snake is supposed to look like, designer morphs are what some people want snakes to look like.

Hybird breeders can predict about the future of the hobby all they want, but who are they fooling?
 
I have sat on the fence for most of this, reading, learning, and wondering where I stand on this issue................




What we need is ...... a person to stand up and be the spokesperson for the cause. Unless we are heard as a community in mass, it will continue to next year and the year after, and by then unfortunately it will be too late, ...............

People who want to contact me and move forward on this, please do so as I believe there is an overwhelming majority and chance to do something now.


doesn't sound like you were ever sitting on the fence, it's the same old red-neck rhetoric. hate to be the one to break it to you, there is no cause. no lynch-mob, no secret meetings, why do people want to put their ethics upon everyone else when their only argument is " i don't like morphs and hybrids"
 
Wow, Bigi. It's good you feel so passionatly about this, as do many who want to keep things pure.This is how you feel, and it's how many others feel, and that's ok.

But I still fail to see why these animals need to be pure. There are different views on what a hybrid is. Does keeping them pure mean thay need to be found within 100 mtrs of each other or just be the same subspecies even though they are hundreds of KM apart? What will you do when someone like Richard Wells comes along and turns carpets into 15 subspecies?

Captive animals that will never be returned to the wild don't need to "pure" whatever that means. Yes many of you like and prefer animals that way, but it's a preference not a necessity.
 
Captive animals that will never be returned to the wild don't need to "pure" whatever that means. QUOTE]

Captive animals get returned to the wild all the time, usually through escaping but sometimes un-wanted pets get released, especially when their "worth" goes down and you can't give them away or they are illegally kept and the owner does not want to euthanize them, ie; Red Eared Sliders living in the wilds of the East Coast. Of course the hybrid thing will take off like a rocket, as everyone searchers for morphs that know one else has, to chase the dollars...as it did in the US, then it will bust to a degree, old type "morphs" will be worthless, hard to get rid of... a few will be wandering around the wilds, mating with various natural morelia ect... it is already happening now as carpets from other areas have escaped into new areas, pure brown coastals turn up in bushland around Sydney from time to time...
 
The sad thing is that the exotic's & hybrids are here and here to stay.
Nothing anyone can do about it.
The numbers will grow as our hobby grows - sad fact.
Do we make them illegal to have ? then people will simply breed them behind close doors and eventually form their own groups for swaping and selling, or, do we legalise them and then people will go berserk and breed alsorts of wird and wonderful " things " ??
Either way were screw'd !!!
As ive said before, I like the look of exotic's, some are awesome, but their still EXOTIC'S / HYBRIDS................:|
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top