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Originally Posted by deborahbroadus
So they can release animals back to their native habitant, but we can't? ummm I see how it works.
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Not sure if that was sarcasm or what, but if it's an honest question I can elaborate(roughly) on why it's a big no-no for the average hobbyist to just release natives back into the wild... There's all sorts of horrible things that could go wrong if the average hobbyist just decided to create their own program and started releasing native animals back into the wild. Good intentions, perhaps... but they pose a HUUUUGE risk. If an animal were exposed to exotic/unfamiliar diseases and the like that non-native species can potentially carry, they could carry that with them/ or their offspring could carry that back with them and possibly expose/infect the natural population before anyone knew what was going on. The natives would have no natural immunity to this unknown ick and bam, they're either wiped out or the population is damaged beyond repair.
These guys get to do it, because they're focused on making sure that they DON'T introduce some unknown ick to the native populations. They've got government money at their disposal, which helps with the research and study. The average hobbyist does not.
Sorry if this doesn't sound all scientific and whatnot, I'm just summarizing it how it was explained to me.
Is this article anyway related to this one?
http://projectorianne.org/recentnews.html
It's the second article down.
I'm super excited about it. I, for one, would LOOOOVE to be able to see these guys thriving in their natural habitat (Ranging farther/wider than the small pockets they're found in now.) T-T I want to photograph some of these guys one day.