Posted by:
brhaco
at Thu Mar 11 08:17:59 2010 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by brhaco ]
Thats like saying, snakes make up 90% of the herpticultural industry, so the point about lizards is of little consequence..I have a feeling the lizard folks would disagree with you.
Of course they would, since that would be a lie-snakes are a bit more popular than lizards, but nowhere near "90% of the market"-in fact, turtles are actually the most popular herps at the moment.....
You're wrong about the fig and hanging parrots-those species (very few, I admit) that were established in 1990 are still available. The other species you list were vanishingly rare in captivity even back then, and definitely not "established"... ----- Brad Chambers WWW.HCU-TX.ORG
Breeder of: Green Tree Pythons Jungle Carpet Pythons Pastel, Pinstripe, FIRE, Piebald, Clown, Lavender Albino, Leucistic, and Spider Ball Pythons Striped Colombian Boa Constrictors Kenyan, Rufescens, and Conicus Sand Boas Red Phase Western Hognose Snakes Spider Western Hognose Snakes Albino Western Hognose Snakes Locality Trans-Pecos Mexican Hognose Snakes Southern Hognose Snakes Eastern Hognose Snakes Tricolor Hognose Snakes Hypo Checkered Garter Snakes Eastern Blackneck Garter Snakes Stillwater Hypo Bullsnakes Patternless Bullsnakes S. GA Eastern Kingsnakes Locality Desert Kingsnakes Albino Desert Kingsnakes Hypo Desert Kingsnakes Mexican Black Kingsnakes Desert Phase, Striped Desert, Newport, and Coastal California Kingsnakes Locality Mexican Milksnakes Spotted Mexican Milksnakes Tangerine Mexican Milksnakes Locality Alterna Abbott Okeetee Cornsnakes Mexican Baird's Ratsnakes Cape Housesnakes Tangerine Albino African Fat -Tailed Geckos Locality Spotted Turtles
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