kmurphy said:
Actually what is ridiculous is comparing your children to your snakes.
Culling "defective" babies from a litter is far from a new idea, though not as common as it used to be. Heck, (since so many people like to make the comparison to dogs) it wasn't too long ago that certain
COLORS of dogs were culled at birth. It was due to a combination of factors, including a link between that color and congenital problems (deafness being one of them). Apply it to "investment" animals, and here is the situation as it may have played out:
A breeding produced a small number of defective animals out of an otherwise healthy appearing litter. This defect is thought to be inherited (this may or may not be known in the earliest stages). The stakes are high, so what do you do???
- Keep the babies and raise them as pets, never to be bred? (easy enough with one or two, but factor in multiple litters over several years, THEN think about it).
- Offer them out as "pets" and not for breeding, at a greatly reduced price? This carries two issues - 1) it publicizes that you have inheritable defects in your animals...not a good thing if this is how you are making your living, 2) it further increases the likelihood that somebody will see the chance at $$ and breed it anyway, spreading the weak genes and exacerbating the problem
- Cull the defective ones, and hope for the best.
- Cull all of the neonates
Remember, albino boas are just becoming affordable and "mainstream". 3-4 years ago, how many people were considering shelling out the bucks they commanded to have a cool looking pet? For the people that purchased them 8-10 (or more) years ago, the investment was not small
...*as a result, too few took the most responsible step and stopped breeding the parent animals that produced the defects. Most probably just culled the defects and sold the sibs (or in some cases kept them for future breeding)