No, nobody can seriously believe that zoo directors are watching smuggled reptiles and cheering 'soon they will breed and we can get some'. Please be serious. Catching smugglers is a job for police and customs. Zoos simply can do nothing about smuggling of reptiles except some education (what they do).
However, once the species is common in captivity, then it makes no sense for zoos to abstain from keeping them. The horse has bolted. And, to remind you, zoo populations of reptiles are a tiny fraction of wild and hobbyist populations. How many Fiji iguanas are in all zoos together - less than 50?
However, case can be made that catching small animals in the wild is not harmful as long as it is kept small scale and does not threaten the whole population.
Some countries, instead of fighting the unavoidable trade (or, actually, mostly doing nothing in the field) could allow controlled legal catching of reptiles or birds, with funds directed to conservation. The most difficult part seems to be controlling that the legal trade does not provide the cover to the illegal trade on a scale threatening the species. And of course, changing the attitude of some bureaucrats, that if they prohibit something, it does not exist.![]()
tuatara have been intercepted, and I have heard reliable stories from this side of the world of animals being sold and kept overseas.I've yet to encounter a smuggled tuatara in a collection outside of NZ, and I know some people who would add them to their collections if there was any chance whatsoever.
As for the latest Naultinus gecko incident: the two specimens were returned to NZ via Cologne zoo last year.
BfN: Bundesweite Wanderaktionen zur biologischen Vielfalt: ein voller Erfolg[tt_news]=5408
What you think zoochatters, wich zoo animal species, who are currently represented in small number of zoos (and in small (relatively) numbers of individuals), will have quite expanding population (both by captive breeding and because of ''wild'' imports) in zoos in near future.
I was inspired for this thread from Venezuelan red howler monkey, and Bolivian adventure of devilfish
I can list these animals species, who currently are (very) rare to see in zoos, but who have the potential for expanding of their population in zoos, quickly, in the near future:
-Venezuelan red howler
-Bonobo
-Koala (Queensland subspecies)
What other animals can come on your mind?![]()
I don't know about that; they are breeding pretty steadily in Europe, so they may well hit a point where the population explodes, akin to the one Giant Anteater reached.Koalas will mostly never take off (outside of Aus) as they require SO many gum leaves. So unless a zoo was willing to make an enormous gumtree farm or continually ship gum leaves from Australia there will not be a koala explosion anytime soon.
Either that or I was hallucinating the bloody big one in my garden which was there all my life until a storm took it down two years ago.....I have heard that eucalyptus trees are grown outside of Australia as well...
I have heard that eucalyptus trees are grown outside of Australia as well...
Either that or I was hallucinating the bloody big one in my garden which was there all my life until a storm took it down two years ago.....
Funny I visited a garden centre the other weekend and guess what it was selling eucalyptus trees,native were cultivated from plants that originated in guess which country?Yes you guessed correct its Australia,so we have the food source for them growing in this country!Yes there are gum trees native to other parts of the world for example Africa they are also common in Europe BUT koalas are fussy buggers and will only exempt around 20 types of the 1000s of gum tree species...
Funny I visited a garden centre the other weekend and guess what it was selling eucalyptus trees,native were cultivated from plants that originated in guess which country?Yes you guessed correct its Australia,so we have the food source for them growing in this country!
If they only exempt around 20 types, that still leaves 980-ish types they can have![]()
Opps sorry I didn't mean exempt but I ment except.
How do you know that we don't have vast numbers of them over here!I know of one collection that has over 250 planted within its grounds not that the general public ever sees more than the 12 planted in the public grounds.I didn't say that gum trees are not in Europe I just said the vast number required to grow to sustain a koala population is insane hence why they are not many in captivity outside of Australia.
Koalas will mostly never take off (outside of Aus) as they require SO many gum leaves. So unless a zoo was willing to make an enormous gumtree farm or continually ship gum leaves from Australia there will not be a koala explosion anytime soon.