Critter Mom
New member
Is it true that all of our caudates' lives are being shortened by being in captivity, whether they were CB or WC, simply because they ARE in captivity? We all know (or should) the horrors the WC has to face on the way to the pet store by now (and sometimes while there too). But are we also harming them after we take them home, with a balanced diet with the variety we can not possibly provide as well as the one they would find in "nature"? With not being allowed to roam free, and being stuck in an aquarium "replica" of what we interpret their "native conditions" to be like? With the inevitable noise, physical disturbances, different conditions (temperature spikes and drops...NOT the same as nature), handling, lack of variety in the diet, boredom, foreign stimuli, chemicals, synthetics, etc. not encountered in the wild? What do you think?
I know the reverse is true for some animals, such as the sugar glider because if left in the wild, they have their natural predators and man to deal with and the destruction of their habitat, etc. If left in the wild, their life expectancy is 5-7 years. If in captivity, it rises to 12-15 years!
In the case of hermit crabs for example, they can live up to 30 years in the wild, but in captivity, due to the horrid conditions they usually face on their way to the pet store, they have their lifespans usually shortened to about 6-9 MONTHS. They also do not have the varied diet they would in the wild, and sometimes have very few shells to choose from and will cram themselves in too small of a shell, get stuck and die. The shells are often painted and the paint is toxic and eaten when it chips off. They can't breed in captivity like they can in the ocean.
With caudates, are we shortening their lives by "keeping" them, no matter how "close" we are to keeping them in their "natural state" in captivity?
I know the reverse is true for some animals, such as the sugar glider because if left in the wild, they have their natural predators and man to deal with and the destruction of their habitat, etc. If left in the wild, their life expectancy is 5-7 years. If in captivity, it rises to 12-15 years!
In the case of hermit crabs for example, they can live up to 30 years in the wild, but in captivity, due to the horrid conditions they usually face on their way to the pet store, they have their lifespans usually shortened to about 6-9 MONTHS. They also do not have the varied diet they would in the wild, and sometimes have very few shells to choose from and will cram themselves in too small of a shell, get stuck and die. The shells are often painted and the paint is toxic and eaten when it chips off. They can't breed in captivity like they can in the ocean.
With caudates, are we shortening their lives by "keeping" them, no matter how "close" we are to keeping them in their "natural state" in captivity?