Iguana_Cabana
Well-Known Member
Whoops forgot to mention earlier: the guy who is the current CEO of the AZA, Dan Ashe, used to work for the Obama FWS. Is it not any more crystal clear that the current AZA loathes the private trade?
How old is she?
Aren't there limitations on whether they can breed or not from the MMPA or USFWS?
Whoops forgot to mention earlier: the guy who is the current CEO of the AZA, Dan Ashe, used to work for the Obama FWS. Is it not any more crystal clear that the current AZA loathes the private trade?
Did you... even read my previous reply to you? I specifically pointed out that while that was once the case, it no longer is. Breeding was never even outright forbidden, there was just a permitting process that zoos had to go through first.
Her name is Qannik and she entered the captive population in 2011. She's not even the youngest rescue bear within the population, both Kali (2013) and Kova (2021) were rescued after she was.
Doves are game species and thus are excluded from MBTA. They are hunted in both the US and Mexico.Sadly, they really can. Check out a Mexican dove hunt listing if you don't believe me.
There's hunting and there's slaughter IMO. Dove hunting in Mexico is a slaughter fest.
The bag limit in Texas is 15 btw.
Many zoos will choose to avoid certain permitting processes altogether because it's too difficult or too expensive.
It looks like you didn't read my reply yourself, either. I said limitations, not bans.
The MMPA also makes it practically impossible for AZA zoos in the lower 48 to get polar bears.
Doves are game species and thus are excluded from MBTA. They are hunted in both the US and Mexico.
You literally said this first, my dude.
So what you're saying is the MMPA used to have massive hurdles for zoos acquisitioning polar bears, and now zoos are playing catch up?
When exactly were these exemptions made, anyway?
Uh, no? I never said that? We've been discussing previous issues with breeding rescued polar bears, not acquiring them in the first place. The Alaska Zoo isn't even accredited and houses polar bears, including any and all orphaned cubs prior to placement in the lower 47.
At least two years ago. Prior to Payton's ill-fated move to Louisville Zoo. You might've been aware of that had you done more research on the topic. It's been talked about quite a bit on ZooChat.
Laws change, "dude".
I still want to know when this came to effect.
But the ESA is not a reflection of the current needs of wildlife conservation. It is a reflection of the 1970s environmental movement.
This sort of attitude is why I don't engage with ZooChat anymore.
I don't have a problem with being wrong. It opens up possibilities. Some sources would be nice.
Just because a law has a few issues doesn't mean these issues cause the law to have more harm than good.They're not hunted in the US at the same capacity as Mexico.
Game birds are actually not excluded from the MBTA. You need a federal stamp to hunt geese, ducks, and mergansers. Doves are exempt from the stamp, not MBTA status.
And in my personal opinion, the MMPA isn't one that needs to be gutted.
We need new laws that reflect the current environment of conservation. Maybe even ones that actually protect critical habitat for endangered species from people like the current administration.I disagree, vehemently. Given whose running the show right now, we need the ESA now more than ever before.
I'm not going to hold your hand and spoon feed you, I've told you where the information can be found. Now go and find it yourself, surely you were taught in school how to use a search engine? One that's built into the website itself, no less.
Just because a law has a few issues doesn't mean these issues cause the law to have more harm than good.
Protection of birds from the fashion industry probably isn't something that's needed today, you are correct (although would it be in an alternate history where MBTA wasn't passed? I do not know). But, given the far-reaching wording of the MBTA, I think it is almost certain that any industry which takes or disturbs birds - not only fashion - was what the MBTA was intended to regulate, including windmills. In that, it continues to do its job excellently.Again, the MBTA isn't really a reflection of the need to regulate modern wind mills. It was originally to punish people that collect even shed feathers, and it's still used that way.
There was a time when that legislation was necessary to protect birds from the fashion industry.
Rich coming from the guy who called me a "Willard Price book in real life" himself.
This sort of attitude is why I don't engage with ZooChat anymore.
If indigenous people can harvest wildlife and zoos can breed and acquisition animals they have breeding programs for, then I would agree.
We need new laws that reflect the current environment of conservation.
Maybe even ones that actually protect critical habitat for endangered species from people like the current administration.
If only I could have this nasty attitude with the same users that have belittled me in the past when they ask me to quote them on it.