Jim O said:
So what? Ed Clark needs to test all of his animals and stop sales until his colony is cleared. He needs to inform all of his customers going back at least a year (maybe more) that their animals may have been exposed to parasites. That's what a reputable breeder would do.
I really hate being put in a position where I'm forced, by what I believe to be logical and true, to defend Ed.
All animals sold by anyone to anyone
may have been exposed to parasites. There are a small subsection of dealers who will blatantly sell untreated wild caught animals that have a high likelyhood of carrying and sharing various parasites and diseases. I'm pretty sure anyone who's been around long enough can name at least four or five- some of us are aware of more- who fall into that category. Most people who keep animals have some practices that are a potential transmission risk. Be it handling someone else's animals and then handling their own, or not keeping their private feeder colony in lab sterile conditions or not maintaining quaranteen that lasts eighteen months. I do not personally feel that it's worth villifying and condemning an individual when their practices and standards are not
exceptionally noteworthy for their negative characteristics.
Ten months it took for these parasites to be noticeable. If... and it's a monumental
IF the animal was sent with a parasite load, it certainly wasn't one that anyone had any reason to suspect was present at the time. Given the number of possible methods of transmission and duration of time, it's flat out absurd to even hazard a guess as to the source of the problem. It's a possibility that the parasites came from Ed and it's a possibility that they came from a beetle that wandered into the "closed" (Ha!) rodent colony, the only reason people are willing to blame Ed given the times involved is because they don't like him and are willing to overlook what is probable and likely in favor of what is possible but unlikely.
What I say "So what?" I mean specifically the act of selling an animal that has a hidden parasite load. Hidden being the key word there. Parasite loads are an inherent part of being a multicellular organism, some parasites are nastier, some have minimal deterimental effects, some can remain a non-issue for years, some kill your animals short term, some won't be an issue if the animal's immune system is healthy, some can overpower an animal regardless of the conditions it's being kept in. The animal appeared healthy when it was sold, when it arrived and for a LONG duration of time after the fact. There was nothing evil involved in it's sale.
Wes said-
So What if mr. clark lied to this lady and sent her imports instead of captive born and bred future holdbacks from his own breeders.
So what if she may not be the only one.
So what if he lied to her.
So what if he took advantage of her and got several hundred dollars worth of lizards for 45.00 dollars worth of ball pythons.
So what if he did not care at all about possibly introducing a detrimental pathogen to her other snakes.
So what.
You're basing the assumption that the animals were not represented properly on the assumption that Ed sold them with a parasite load. That's a big... big... assumption based on very scanty evidence to support it. It's not any more likely that Ed sold the animals with parasites than it is that they ended up in the animal after the point of sale. If they did come with the animals when shipped, it's no more likely that he misrepresented the animals than it would be that they were added to the animal when he fed them a random rodent.
You want him to have done something wrong because you don't like the guy. You're willing to jump to poorly evidenced conclusions and label Ed's actions as wrong on that basis. I'm not. Nothing that has been shown here has convinced me that Ed is at fault in this situation, nothing has proven that he lied nothing has proven that he misrepresented the animals. Not yet anyway and I don't see any possible way for this situation to play out and provide what would be required to prove anything. Ed's got a reputation and a history of being called on misdeeds, if he were a parasite factory, there'd be other people who would be vocalizing that.
I do fecals here, at home. Kinda casually, never when I see conditions that would warrant taking a sample to a vet but out of interest. I have clean, healthy fat happy animals. I've never yet done a fecal smear or float at home when I didn't find some evidence of *something* in at least one of the animals and we're talking a private collection where I breed the majority of my own feeders with under three hundred animals.