In the last month or so, there's been a massive outing of a US reticulated python breeder as a chronic animal abuser. There's an entire Facebook group dedicated to the subject if one cares to see the details. Some of the examples of abuse are quite graphic and frankly unimaginable until seen. The video was released by a provocative rival breeder who got extremely angry when an animal he lent to a colleague somehow wound up at the abuser's facility.which he rightly believed to be the equivalent of a puppy mill for large constrictors
I personally keep one reticulated python. I am not a breeder, but I am loosely familiar with the niche. The outing of the abuser, who owned hundreds of females raised many strictly mathematical questions. Retics can lay 30 plus eggs per year. If someone has 100 females that makes for 3K baby pythons that will be large enough to kill a person. Are there enough people in the US capable of meeting an animal like that's needs to sustain that kind of production? Who feeds that many animals? What happens when they don't sell and become things that cost more and more money to keep alive?
US reptile husbandry has gone from being a passion to being a business with the morph explosion in the late 90's/early 2000's. Lots of investment occurred and keeping became less about finding animals that you genuinely loved keeping and more about breeding tons of animals with as many traits as possible.
I think this event, which has been more impactful than intended, will cause a large degree of change in the US reptile hobby. People will ask questions of themselves and others about why they do what they do and how they can provide the best life for their charges. I personally welcome it. Morph breeding generated interest, but it really homogenized the whole market as basically a ball python hobby rather than a reptile hobby cumulatively.
I personally keep one reticulated python. I am not a breeder, but I am loosely familiar with the niche. The outing of the abuser, who owned hundreds of females raised many strictly mathematical questions. Retics can lay 30 plus eggs per year. If someone has 100 females that makes for 3K baby pythons that will be large enough to kill a person. Are there enough people in the US capable of meeting an animal like that's needs to sustain that kind of production? Who feeds that many animals? What happens when they don't sell and become things that cost more and more money to keep alive?
US reptile husbandry has gone from being a passion to being a business with the morph explosion in the late 90's/early 2000's. Lots of investment occurred and keeping became less about finding animals that you genuinely loved keeping and more about breeding tons of animals with as many traits as possible.
I think this event, which has been more impactful than intended, will cause a large degree of change in the US reptile hobby. People will ask questions of themselves and others about why they do what they do and how they can provide the best life for their charges. I personally welcome it. Morph breeding generated interest, but it really homogenized the whole market as basically a ball python hobby rather than a reptile hobby cumulatively.