pigmy is an older spelling. Almost everybody spells it pygmy nowadays. Myself, I always spell it pigmy. Both are correct (or rather, neither is incorrect
)
However I thought the whole point of the modern zoo was to propagate a species that was on the edge. If there are less than 2000 in the wild, why not have at least a small captive population just in case.
Condor said:If -as I suspect- there never has been reasonable levels of breeding in this species it would be a big risk to catch a bunch and then hope it turned out well. You would probably need at least 5 unrelated pairs from the beginning to be reasonably sure of avoiding inbreeding depression in the long term and that's only if all pairs breed successfully.
you still haven't said which "private facilities" these are yet....Tarsius said:Interesting to know, a few years ago, an animal dealer from africa offered some jentinks duiker to the zoos, but nobody wanted them. UsA ha phased them out, for europe, the animals and the transport was to expensive, only two private facillities in japan bought jentink duikers. So these animals are a good hope to build there a captive population. A Zoo staff member at one of these facillities told me, the wild population of jentinks duiker is much better now and its a little bit growing.
a few years ago [.....] two private facillities in japan bought jentink duikers.
wild population of jentinks duiker is much better now and its a little bit growing.
same here. Tarsius is well-known on here for deliberately spreading false information (apparently he finds it amusing), and I would like to see some proof of his claim.condor said:I'm looking forward to seeing any external source supporting that this. It would certainly enlighten me as I was completely unaware of new Jentink's having entered the zoo world (even if private facilities) within the last few years. Searching via various sources has not resulted in anything either but my knowledge of Japanese facilities is limitied and I could have missed something.
Searching via various sources has not resulted in anything either but my knowledge of Japanese facilities is limited and I could have missed something.
well, that answers that then I guess....Tarsius said:Sorry, Chlidonias, but I have to dissappoint you...
Worth mentioning that Jentink's duiker is on CITES I and Japan and the 3 countries where it is found (Côte d'Ivoire, Liberia, Sierra Leone) are all CITES members. Exports/imports would only be legal with documentation. A check of CITES reports for these countries hasn't resulted in anything but this was only a fast check.