I've spent most of my time as a reptile keeper being passionate about locality purity, however, I have no idea why I care. I used to like the idea of having an animal which was representative of what you might find in the wild. Something which looked and behaved like a wild animal, a piece of nature I could enjoy and learn from. The ideals of the reptile community have changed since then, and I've changed with it to some extent. It is not a small group of keen reptile enthusiats any more, it's a money-driven industry fueled by people wanting to own reptiles as 'pets'.
Even the locality freaks want abino this, axanthic that, high yellow the other, melanistic something else and triple-blizard-snow-spotted dreamiscle-orange-blazed tornado-swirly nuclear-devastation-red that thing. We want good feeders, good handlers, we don't want something which is like what we find in the wild.
If some kid unexpectedly hatched 12 'pet shop Antaresia' and three of them happened to be Melanistic, the locality origin of the animals would make people no less keen to thrust their dollar-filled fists in the direction of that lucky kid and the snakes would go on to be bred like mad. If those same snakes happened to be locality pure, people would want them to stay locality pure. Why is it so? I would be far more attracted to them if they were pure, but I am the first to admit that their market value and general appeal would be virtually no different.
My appreciation for morphs came when the masses of pet-style keepers flooded our ranks. Poaching is a huge issue presently, but when you're only interested in something if it's homozygous for three mutations, poaching won't matter any more. I now embrace and enjoy the artificial appearance of these animals, but for reasons I have not identified and can't understand, I still have a fondness for locality purety.
So, does anyone have an explanation? Is it nothing more than sentimentality? For many reasons our animals are unsuitable for release into the wild, so don't bother with that one. With Antaresia you'll generally produce the best-looking babies by keeping things pure (crossing a patternless Children's with a high-contrast Stimson's, or Blonde Mac is going to produce crap babies), but this isn't always the case with everything, particularly Carpets, which will probably always be the main species of focus (I'm so glad I don't like them! I won't get so upset to see their gene pools slowly mixed into one big soup :lol: ).
All I can think of it that it's a game. It's cool to have pure animals because we say it is. That's enough for me, but I'd love to know if anyone has a better reason. I'd also like to know if anyone has a moral reason which could be used against those who would like to cross.
There are potentially welfare issues regarding 'hard' hybridising such as between Morelia, Liasis and Aspidites, but that's a different concern, so if you'd like to discuss that, or the legalities, please start your own thread. I'm interested in seeing arguments for (or against if you have them) keeping things pure where there are no health issues involved (Carpets being an obvious example, Antaresia being another).
Even the locality freaks want abino this, axanthic that, high yellow the other, melanistic something else and triple-blizard-snow-spotted dreamiscle-orange-blazed tornado-swirly nuclear-devastation-red that thing. We want good feeders, good handlers, we don't want something which is like what we find in the wild.
If some kid unexpectedly hatched 12 'pet shop Antaresia' and three of them happened to be Melanistic, the locality origin of the animals would make people no less keen to thrust their dollar-filled fists in the direction of that lucky kid and the snakes would go on to be bred like mad. If those same snakes happened to be locality pure, people would want them to stay locality pure. Why is it so? I would be far more attracted to them if they were pure, but I am the first to admit that their market value and general appeal would be virtually no different.
My appreciation for morphs came when the masses of pet-style keepers flooded our ranks. Poaching is a huge issue presently, but when you're only interested in something if it's homozygous for three mutations, poaching won't matter any more. I now embrace and enjoy the artificial appearance of these animals, but for reasons I have not identified and can't understand, I still have a fondness for locality purety.
So, does anyone have an explanation? Is it nothing more than sentimentality? For many reasons our animals are unsuitable for release into the wild, so don't bother with that one. With Antaresia you'll generally produce the best-looking babies by keeping things pure (crossing a patternless Children's with a high-contrast Stimson's, or Blonde Mac is going to produce crap babies), but this isn't always the case with everything, particularly Carpets, which will probably always be the main species of focus (I'm so glad I don't like them! I won't get so upset to see their gene pools slowly mixed into one big soup :lol: ).
All I can think of it that it's a game. It's cool to have pure animals because we say it is. That's enough for me, but I'd love to know if anyone has a better reason. I'd also like to know if anyone has a moral reason which could be used against those who would like to cross.
There are potentially welfare issues regarding 'hard' hybridising such as between Morelia, Liasis and Aspidites, but that's a different concern, so if you'd like to discuss that, or the legalities, please start your own thread. I'm interested in seeing arguments for (or against if you have them) keeping things pure where there are no health issues involved (Carpets being an obvious example, Antaresia being another).