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Posted by Greeri on March 21, 2000 at 02:00:43:
In Reply to: Re: Answer posted by Pedersen,Søe on March 20, 2000 at 02:28:07:
:
: Hi again
: It is true that we don`t have many local forms of alterna if any at all. The reason is very simple. We don`t catch our breeding stock but rely on the animals we can buy from USA...........
: Conserning obsoleta subspecies. I am not updated in the european situation, but some years back there was a German and a Dane who had true williamsi and many other true forms. I don`t have any contact with them any more, but I can see if I can find them.
we didn't have locality specific in the states much on alterna and rosie until the price dropped. Peg the locality of the animal and you make another fifty dollars or more per animal. Most wild caught greybands do not acclimate worth a darn to captivity, so between habitat destruction of both alterna and rosies and high mortality of alterna I'd say the labeling is to make cash rather than the welfare of the animal.
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