Dean, the bacterial infection that we are treating in the fire skinks is not something that would have come in with wc animals. It is husbandry related and has been present in these animals for a long time.
But yes, some of it did come in on the wc animals, and this is one thing that the industry as a community needs to examine! You just pass that kind of problem off on the person who buys the animal or allow those illnesses and parasites to be spread to other animals in your facility?? I know people who buy and sell wild caught animals. They are much smaller scale than USGE, but they treat the wc animals before they put them on the market. Shouldn't that be a standard practice? It might cost a little more in the short term, but will raise the worth of the animals that you sell and create not only customer appreciation but will keep people like the SPCA off your back.
I'm not really sure most people even understand the business model of wholesalers and importers, much less the basic pet trade, from what I am reading here in this thread. The ONLY people who tend to hang onto animals for any length of time are the actual breeders of captive animals, and the end users who buy the animals as pets or living knick-knacks. Everyone else inbetween really just wants to move the animals in and out of their hands as quickly as possible. Why? Well because living animals generate costs as long as they are in their hands, and the liability that that may die before being moved onto their customer. The people buying these animals for resale REALLY want to move the animals along as quickly and as humanly possible for those reasons.
So in the above example concerning the fire skinks, if they had that infection "for a long time", then quite certainly they had it before ever coming into USGE's hands. Jasen likely was not breeding them, nor was he keeping them for personal pets. He likely got them in as a bulk group, and quite likely was trying real hard to sell them all as soon as possible so losses wouldn't reduce or completely eliminate his profit margin.
Now as for "standard practices", yes they are in place, but not at every level in the trail that leads from the animal being captured in the wild and ending where the animal ends up in the hands of the final customer. It is "common" knowledge that if you buy a wild caught animal from anyone, then it is your responsibility to assume that it will have medical issues and take precautions to not only treat those animals, but to also safeguard the rest of your animals by engaging suitable quarantine procedures. This "standard practice" starts at the end of the end user side of the trail, and can also be SOP for some of the better "middle men" who will buy from the actual importers and larger wholesales, who will advertise that they "hand pick" their animals and thereby obtain the better samples available They also will apply medical and manual procedures to try to rid those animals of internal and external pathogens. The closer you get to the actual SOURCE of the animals, the less and less likely that any such procedures or practices will be incorporated. Simply because the volume of animals, the amount of hoped for time those animals will be in their care, and the targeted profit margin designed to move large numbers of animals out QUICKLY will tend to preclude those kinds of costs and efforts being applied at those facilities.
For better or worse, THIS has been the state of the wild caught imported chain of procurement for quite a long time. It is common knowledge that speed is of the essence in getting those animals to their final destinations, as the quicker they get to someone who can and will provide proper care, the more likely it is that those animals will survive and thrive. There are people who will not buy wild caughts because of the trials and tribulations involved, and know that cheap imports have a plethora of risks involved. There are shows that will not allow wild caughts to be displayed for sale to the public, because the promoters know that those animals really are not very well suited to be sold directly to the public and try to prevent the likely disappointments that can result from taking place. That is the nature of the beast. Most people who KNOW the business know that this is the way it is.
Just as I am sure that no one really wants to think about where those steaks and hamburgers, or the chicken drumsticks and pork chops really come from that we see in the supermarket, and really don't want to see videos and photos of the entire process from one end to the other, the ugly side of a lot of things really are necessary for the entire process to take place. Heck, for that matter would we all want to see photos and videos of the literal slave markets in China in the process of making goods we buy at Walmart? Probably not, but not seeing them doesn't mean they aren't there. Unfortunately, the pet trade just had this ugly side of it go front page news on us.
I am not trying to condone the system, just stating that the pet trade is the way it is simply because that's the way it has always functioned. Captive breeding has not been around nearly as long as just importing animals for the pet trade. Matter of fact, the zoos NEVER used to do any captive breeding at all, and would just constantly refresh the stock they had with newer animals as the older and sick ones died off. Do you really think people were breeding hippos, elephants and giraffes for the zoos years ago? How many of those animals either didn't survive the journey from wild caught to zoo exhibition, or else arrived in very poor shape needing the zoo vet to make extraordinary efforts to make the animal display worthy? How many of you older folks grew up reading those account by Gerald Durrell collecting scores of wild caught animals? Where do you think those animals were headed for?
Sorry, but I believe the various "societies" attacking the pet and animal trade in general are just well cognizant of the weak link in the chain and are attacking at that juncture knowing that it is likely to bring success for whatever their ultimate goals actually are. Can the seamy side of the animal trade change before it gets choked off by legislation? Perhaps. But not without some major sacrifices all across the board. The end user just will not be able to expect to get "cheap" animals any longer, simply because the costs will go up exponentially in order to get the animals to them in suitably and acceptably healthy condition. If they are not willing to pay that price, then the pipeline will simply choke off and die as the business will not be there to sustain it. The pet trade is ultimately dictated the demands of the people who buy those animals from them. If they get priced out of the market because of the demands made on the pipeline needed to feed that market, then it just flat out will not survive.