"We want these things to survive without too much manipulation," Associate Professor Gardner said.
BEST WAY to ensure the species survives is to set up a breeding colony and make about 1/2 the offspring available to the amateur keepers who are obligated to give 1/2 the offspring from their breeding groups to the national parks for release into the wild at suitable locations.
A widely distributed remnant population who's kept safe and allowed to breed in the wild and in captivity has the best chance of not going extinct.
The first part, yes, is a good idea. The second part (taking half the offspring produced by private keepers and releasing them into the wild) is utterly stupid and destructive, as well as logistically unrealistic.
Private keepers are all sorts of irresponsible. They give their reptiles parasites and diseases. Releasing animals from private keepers into the wild is about as good an idea as using an anvil for a parachute. Asking private keepers to give up half their produce and keep the other half is going to make them give the animals with any defects etc and keep the good ones for themselves, and good luck getting a system like this which relies on the honesty system to work!
Widely-distributed remnant population is an oxymoron. That population including captive individuals is nonsensical.
Establishing an auxiliary population in captivity though, yes, is a good way to ensure the species' survival. The zoos should breed them up, sell them into the foreign market with a 90% tax rate with proceeds going to conservation, and everyone will win. This will not happen.
Some keepers who might be issued a special permit to participate maybe .
I wonder if you are really just making some kind of Freudian slipup her and just displaying to us how you'd behave if part of this distributed survival breeding campaign.
So if amateurs are honest enough and unreliable , keep the amateurs out of the scheme ( no loss there as they are not available anyway ) and involve zoos only then .
As it stands now , the chances of the species surviving is poor, they aren't widely enough dispersed in genetically viable pockets that are isolated from each other and safe from introduced predators.
I know they breed easy and they are for sale here, captive bred, in europe.
I know of 2 who breeds them, a pair of babies are about 12000 aus dollars
Wow. That's a tad more than I'd have guessed. They don't look particularly amazing, I wouldn't have thought they'd be any more interesting to hobbyists than a lot of other medium sized skinks.
But shows the reason why poachers / wildlife traffickers regard it as such an easy get rich very fast scheme . Lot of reptile keepers in the USA and Europe and Asia don't care if the reptiles are wild caught and trafficked .
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