A high price on newts isn't necessarily a bad thing, as it also minimizes impulse purchases.
I'm not going to delve into what I feel is the faulty reasoning of this assertion, but will jump right to the point that impulse purchases are irrelevant in the case of
kaiseri. What's relevant is that large groups of adults are being removed from a very small wild population due to high monetary returns, driving the animal closer to extinction. Whether the animals die at the hands of an impulse purchase, at the distributors' warehouse, or even in the hands of a hobbyist with the best possible care, the dire problem for the wild population remains unabated.
Does the dime-a-dozen-price of other more commonly available caudate species prevents their collection in the wild?
Plentiful newt species have always been collected and sold for cheap prices in the international pet trade. In the case of the US or EU for instance though, we have laws preventing beautiful species with very small ranges or populations from being ravaged by the pet trade, such as
N. meridionalis or
Salamandrina. But
kaiseri have no such protection. There are other salamanders in Iran, and they are not being collected. It is specifically the high value of
kaiseri and easy collection methodthat makes them the only current Iranian target.
So the current ridiculously high price demanded for A. andersoni is likely going to result in its wild collection?
It's certainly not outside the realm of possibility. Again, the difference here between
kaiseri and
andersoni is legality. If someone can indeed figure out a way to get down to Mexico and spend perhaps 200$ to collect 200
andersoni in a weekend and then get back to the states and
legally sell them for 150$ each...well, you do the math. It's quite profitable. It unquestionably would happen.
If I and 10 other generous breeders raise as many kaiseri juvs as we can, and then sell them for $5 each, they will be "sold out" in about 2 days. With the price that low, and a limited supply, the demand becomes virtually infinite. Then after that 2-day sale, the importers go back to selling their $120 WC animals, and there are still enough "craving" people out there to buy them. There is just no way to ever satisfy the demand for a newt this pretty; none of us have the capacity to raise a thousand of them (I wish!)
Please reconsider this. Even if you only sold 50 at 5$ each on a high-profile site like Kingsnake.com, it would give invaluable pause for thought. It's an enormous price discrepancy. People, especially the dealers examining the competition's prices, pay close attention on that site. People would email the sellers and ask why their newts are 150$ when I saw them last week for 5$? What would the dealer say? Nothing could be said, other than a defense of what the dealer paid for them to begin with. The dealers offering kaiseri would then have to seriously rethink purchasing the far more expensive animals next year. They would contact the hobbyists and see if they could buy directly from them instead. It could potentially cut the profit of the collectors in half in one year, I absolutely believe that. It would not be difficult for 10 hobbyists to equal the output (230) of WC kaiseri imported this year.
The demand for these WC animals is coming from people beyond our "buddy list" (including the rich idiots who buy them to toss into their fish tank),
Certainly.
and until we can produce enough offspring to satisfy that demand, we can't do a darned thing about it.
Here's where I disgaree. Selling even a group of 50$ at 5$ a piece would have an enormous impact on the psyche of the buying public. Especially if they emailed you, and found out they could wait another year to get a group at 5$ a piece. The problem is, none of the hobbyists are willing to do it when they could make 5K instead.
Honestly, I'm a little shocked at all the defense of
kaiseri prices on this forum. Make no mistake about it,
kaiseri are
critically endangered. Why? The high profit of collection for the pet trade. Basically what I'm getting from people here is as follows:
I know that kaiseri is critically endangered and going extinct due to collection for the pet trade. I know that the large public demand for such a rare, colorful species and high import profit make this very difficult to stop. It's a dire situation. I've thought long and hard about it, and have decided it's out of my control. So rather than get upset about it or try anything radical like selling them for 5$ each, I'm going to get my slice of the pie.