If people can check the boxes of whatever they want, then there really is no point to the registry.
I think that really depends on what is the goal for having a registry. But if every record has pictures that anyone can view online, then peer review will go a long way to ensuring that people won't BS their morph identifications. It becomes even more useful as it fills in and there are parents and offspring shown for a given specimen.
With other registries, it is not the owner that decides if it fits the standard of the breed/morph.
I don't know about the detailed workings of very many registries, but I don't believe this is true. The AKC does not tell people whether their Aussie is a merle or not. The breeder or the person registering the dog does that. With quarter horses, the person registering the horse describes it. Both of these registries issue papers without ever having seen the animal that is registered.
The point is to help get rid of the non jungle posted leos and non carrot tails listed as carrot etc etc ...
Just a few things to consider:
·If you, as an organization (whether it's an individual or a committee) decide which animal meets which criteria, you become wide open to lawsuits whenever anyone disagrees with you about what their animal is.
·Are you willing to place yourself in a position where you are telling everyone else (based on a photograph) including the biggest names in the hobby/industry whether or not their own stock is what they say it is? (With the ACR the simplest question was, "who is qualified to tell Kathy Love whether or not her Okeetees are 'really' Okeetees?")
·What happens when a breeder comes up with a new selectively-bred variation? Are you going to decide for everyone else when something is or is not "new?" (IMO this would be like Gene Siskel telling movie theaters what movies they are allowed to play.

)
·On the other side of that coin, when you as a registry decide what animal qualifies as what morph, you become responsible for whether or not that animal ultimately qualifies as such. Then
you are 100% responsible for the truthfulness and accuracy of the information in the registry. If buyerA purchases an animal from breederB, and the buyer disagrees with your description, they take
you to court over it. (And/or rip
you a new one on the BOI about it, LOL.)
Obviously it's completely your choice how you want to do things, but IMO the above should definitely be considered before making a decision to take on that much responsibility.
