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10 Snake Breeders And Reptile Shops In NJ And New York

It is always a good thing to get an insight into the condition and health of a pet before buying it, so we made a list of 10 snake breeders and reptile shops in NJ and New York that you might visit before purchasing a reptile pet.

The most important thing when considering buying a pet is that it is a healthy and properly raised animal. That is why it is important to obtain reptile pets from good, reliable vendors. Reptiles including snakes are sensitive creatures that should be handled with much care, and it is sometimes not an easy task finding a reliable breeder or good reptile store.

10 Snake Breeders and Reptile Shops in NJ and New York

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A survey has shown that there are around 11.5 million reptile pets in the US, and most of them being purchased from stores. But what is really the best choice of vendors when considering buying snake or reptile pet? The best way to raise a reptile is to get a captive-bred animal, that has experienced being handled by humans. Big stores usually do not breed reptiles they sell. They purchase them from abroad or from mass producers that are only oriented towards the quantity of animals raised. Those animals are often stressed and traumatized, which sometimes can cause lifelong consequences for the animal. Small-scale breeders and specialized stores on the other hand, do take more care of animals they sell. Small-scale reptile breeders are devoted to the thing they do and possess more knowledge about breeding, raising and taking proper care of reptiles. Specialized stores often purchase animals only from those reliable breeders. This devoted business might result in a bit higher animal prices, but they often offer much more exotic and rare animal species, although smaller in number. Anyhow, there is always another way of purchasing a pet, and if you are interested in buying a venomous snake online, you might check out the 10 Websites to Buy Venomous Snakes Cheap with Free Shipping.

We went through many snake breeders and pet shop websites and rank them according to quality and quantity of products they offer. We got guiding lines from Kingsnake website, which is specialized for snakes, and also ReptileCity recommendations for good reptile stores. Some of the breeders did not have the official website, only phone number or email contact so we avoided those because we didn't have an insight in their offers, and we avoided stores and breeders without proper a website in general. We also concentrated on small-scale breeders and smaller reptile pet shops with experience in breeding reptiles because of the reasons we mentioned above. Now get ready for the tour of 10 snake breeders and reptile shops in NJ and New York:


Online Reptile Trade Is A Free-for-All That Threatens Thousands Of Species

September 29, 2020

4 min read

Online Reptile Trade Is a Free-for-All That Threatens Thousands of Species

More than one third of all reptile species, including highly endangered ones, are sold internationally, primarily as pets

Japanese Cave Gecko

The striking colors of the Japanese Cave Gecko (Goniurosaurus orientalis) make it attractive to the exotic pet trade, which in turn can endanger such creatures if proper protections are not in place.

Cave geckos exemplify evolution at its most fantastic. Some have bloodred eyes and sport bright yellow bands down their dark body. Others are Popsicle blue or bear camouflagelike patterns of fiery orange and brown. Many species of these lizards are only found over a tiny range, such as a single limestone hill in China. More than a dozen are listed as threatened with extinction, some of them critically so, by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

Yet partly because they are rare and imperiled, cave geckos are all the rage among reptile collectors. They are among the nearly 4,000 reptile species—including highly endangered ones—that are routinely traded online, according to a paper published on Tuesday in Nature Communications. Animals from 90 percent of those species, representing half of the individual reptiles traded on the Web, are captured from the wild, the authors found. And the majority of these species are not included in any international regulations meant to ensure their trade is sustainable. "At the moment, the status quo is that anything can be traded until you say it can't," says study co-author Alice Hughes, an ecologist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences. "This leaves thousands of species vulnerable to extinction."

As the new paper shows, no organization keeps track of global trade data for species that are not included in the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), a global treaty created in 1973 to ensure commerce involving wild species does not imperil them. Hughes was interested in determining how representative CITES is in terms of the international reptile trade, which affects snakes, lizards, turtles, tortoises and crocodilians, among others. She and her colleagues compiled official data from 2000 to 2019 from CITES and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service records and then gathered their own information from Web sites that sell reptiles. For the latter, they used an algorithm to identify and scrape the data from nearly 24,000 pages at 151 Web sites in English, German, Spanish, Japanese and French.

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The researchers tallied 3,943 species, or 36 percent of all known reptile species, for sale online. Most were those that are legal to trade as pets. But the question of whether a given species can be legally sold internationally is not automatically linked to its conservation status. More than a third of the reptiles on the list—including Borneo's earless monitor lizard and Madagascar's Uroplatus finaritra, a leaf-tailed gecko—have not been evaluated for their conservation status. This situation means scientists have no way of knowing if trade impacts those species' survival. Of the ones that have been evaluated, more than 500 are listed by the IUCN as in danger of extinction. That group includes more than 100 species that are critically endangered, such as Lauhachinda's cave gecko in Thailand and Yamashina's ground gecko in Japan.

The study's findings still underestimate the true number of reptile species caught up in trade, Hughes says, because its analysis did not include social media sites—where previous research has shown that high levels of wildlife trade take place. The paper also lacks results from Web sites in languages other than the five it considered.

Additionally, the research does not attempt to quantify how many individuals of each species are sold online, says Vincent Nijman, a wildlife trade expert at Oxford Brookes University in England, who was not involved in the study. "The paper highlights that, indeed, trade affects a very large number of species," he says. "But if you really want to change policy, you must have a more definite idea of the real volumes involved. That's not a criticism of this study, but that's ultimately where we have to go with future work."

Hughes and her colleagues found that 79 percent of reptile species sold online are not regulated by CITES. For those species and others that are not part of the treaty, quantities would likely be impossible to determine, Hughes says, because no agency tracks them.

To be included in CITES, species must go through a lengthy nomination process—one that, on average, takes more than 10 years to complete, according to a 2019 Science paper. Just showing that trade threatens a species is also not necessarily enough to warrant adding it to the treaty, because commercial interests often take precedence over science, conservationists have warned. "I attended the CITES conference last year in Geneva, and I was frankly stunned by how much of it seemed to be purely economically motivated," Hughes says.

The academic world perhaps "underestimates the overall cost of regulating species under CITES," the CITES Secretariat wrote in a statement to Scientific American. "It is probably true that the strong compliance mechanisms that CITES developed over the years, and for which it is feared and famous, have more impact if species are involved that are commercially important" for the relevant countries where those species are found.

John Scanlon, former secretary-general of CITES, who was not involved in the study, says he does not share the observation that the treaty's members often value economic considerations over scientific ones. Lesser known species of birds, insects, frogs, lizards, rodents, snakes, turtles, and more "do not make the headlines, like issues do with cheetah, giraffes, lions, elephants and rhinos, but they do make up a majority of the listing proposals," he says. "CITES is imperfect, but it has proven to be quite effective."

That said, "there are clearly gaps in our knowledge and data on trade in unlisted species, including reptiles," Scanlon adds. "This report shows that parties should be proposing more reptiles for listing under CITES, which, on the face of this report, looks warranted."

Hughes questions whether the treaty is the best tool for quickly ensuring the pet trade does not imperil species, however. A more effective strategy, she says, would be for individual countries to pass legislation banning the import of certain wild-caught animals, as the U.S. And European Union have already done for many bird species. At the same time, the pet industry could transition to captive-breeding operations with necessary oversight. "We are not against keeping exotic animals as pets, but it has to be sustainable," Hughes says. "We need to develop better systems for making sure pet trade does not lead to species extinctions."






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