Totally have a man crush on Dr. Fry.
wonder what else is out there that hasnt been found
You and your herpetology porn.
right. Fry, Brian Grieg | Australian Venom Research UnitDr Fry is American born but living in Australia right?
silly question but is it even possible to keep sea snakes?!
I'm not too certain of this. They would have to be wild caught, so WA or NT species, which leaves out a lot of my favourites like the Laticauda colubrina. Laticaudae would be easier to keep on one hand due to their semi-terrestrial nature, but they can be specialist feeders (Laticauda laticaudata eats only eels, for instance). However there are generalist feeders like the Olive Sea Snake that pretty much smash whatever you put in front of them (fish-wise), but you would need a very large tank to keep them in (larger than most people would be able to accommodate, certainly), as unlike the Laticaudae they are exclusively aquatic. My sisters ex-partner wrote his doctorate on sea snakes, and found that they were virtually impossible to keep alive on a small scale for more than a few weeks in captivity. However his method of husbandry (open shallow tanks near Herron Island) may not have been ideal compared to todays standard (he attained his PhD a loooong time ago).
Even though the potential exists to collect from the wild (NT and WA permits), the respective departments may not classify any sea snake as being "native" to Australia due to the fact that, in my very limited knowledge, there are no known sea-snake nesting sites in Australia or its waters (Could someone please verify this for me? I'm pretty certain, but am unable to cite a reference on this).
The collection permits don't really work the way you suggest either.
True sea snakes all have live young. Sea kraits lay their eggs on land.
Sea snakes cant be kept in Australia.
Marine reptiles are specifically excluded from being kept in qld
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