The word "herpetoculture" was apparently first devised by Tom Huff[?] to distinguish what he, as a self-described "herpetoculturist", was doing -- working to keeping reptiles and amphibians alive -- from what herpetologists of that era were generally doing, namely, collecting specimens for preservation in a museum collection.
There is a growing distance between amateur herpetoculture and professional herpetology. With the field's increasing focus on conservation biology, some herpetologists believe that herpetoculturists are part of the problem: that collection from the wild by reptile and amphibian enthusiasts for the pet trade is having an adverse impact on wild populations. Herpetoculturists respond by maintaining that their animals are bred in captivity wherever possible, that their captive breeding efforts may actually help to preserve threatened species, and that, with few exceptions, wild collection is incidental and trivial compared to the losses resulting from highway mortality and habitat destruction.
Search Encyclopedia
|
Featured Article
|