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philosophical tought about Darwin's theory
Hey guys,
a thread I answered before about handling snakes (http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...python-relaxed.) actually made me think a little bit.
If we consider that dogs cats and other pets have been kept for hundreds of years as pets. Like also horses have been trained for thousands of years to get them where they are now. They know how to listen, how to act in the present of humans, etc... If we check how long the reptile industrie is going on and how long people have been keeping snakes as pets. Would it be possible that also our snakes would get more and more comfortable with handling as the hobby goes further in time? I don't mean like sit and roll over trick's but you know, getting less stressed in our presence, getting attached to the owner etc..
Myself, I think it would be possible. If you see the progress in some of the nippy little bastards. Most of the time when they grow (especially when treated right and handled regularly) they kinda get used to getting handled. Could this, over a whole lot of time (i'm really talking about 100 years minimum), also change there insticts like it has done with dogs (check wild dogs vs. labrador). I really think there is a point in the family tree where the cause of habit will take over the instinct. Not necessary all the way, but at least to the point where a dog gets to enjoy a nice chuck over the head...
What do you guys/girls think?
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I do agree to a point. I think that the "wild" if possible would have to be bread out of them as in horses and like.
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Anything's possible. But domesticating Mammals and Reptiles are 2 different playing fields. Huge difference between their instinct and "intelligence" levels.
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Re: philosophical tought about Darwin's theory
 Originally Posted by RyanT
Anything's possible. But domesticating Mammals and Reptiles are 2 different playing fields. Huge difference between their instinct and "intelligence" levels.
Agree on that one. though, on the other hand, reptiles are one of the most intelligent creatures on the earth. Considering that they are the oldest species to still survive on our planet with the least of the resources....
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Re: philosophical tought about Darwin's theory
I understand what you're saying here, but I'd have to disagree, even though it makes perfect sense. Reptiles and other herps are simpler in comparison to mammals. Mammals can observe and learn from their surroundings, and can also pick up habits. Herps, on the other hand, are much older and more simpler creatures. Because of this, they act purely on instinct rather than impulse. You can teach a dog to sit by saying 'sit,' and giving him a reward whenever he gets it right. But a snake, on the other hand, won't ever be able to obey a command, no matter how many pinkies you give him. Their brain just doesn't work that way.
As far as herps growing more and more confident with being handled over a few decades or even centuries, I highly doubt it will ever be possible, simply because they cannot learn.
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Re: philosophical tought about Darwin's theory
 Originally Posted by ShamelessAardvark
I understand what you're saying here, but I'd have to disagree, even though it makes perfect sense. Reptiles and other herps are simpler in comparison to mammals. Mammals can observe and learn from their surroundings, and can also pick up habits. Herps, on the other hand, are much older and more simpler creatures. Because of this, they act purely on instinct rather than impulse. You can teach a dog to sit by saying 'sit,' and giving him a reward whenever he gets it right. But a snake, on the other hand, won't ever be able to obey a command, no matter how many pinkies you give him. Their brain just doesn't work that way.
As far as herps growing more and more confident with being handled over a few decades or even centuries, I highly doubt it will ever be possible, simply because they cannot learn.
isn't that what the time is for. For the evolution to change the brain. That is why i am talking about hundreds of years. You can't teach a monkey to sing in 2 years. But would you be able to get a snake to appreciate the owner in 200 years???
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The problem is that snakes are not herd animals nor pack animals. That desire to belong to a group is what makes it easier to domesticate horses and dogs and such. Reptiles have no desire to please even other reptiles generally, so it's much harder. It's much easier to modify an existing behavior than to create a whole new one.
I do think that IF keepers began choosing only the most calm of snakes to breed, you might get a line of snake that hatches out to be more mellow and accepting. But it wouldn't "appreciate" the owner, nor be a 'partner' to a human like a horse or dog.
Domestication is only the tinyest of steps in something as long term as evolution. Controlled breeding can change certain aspects but the base animal is still the same. Dogs are still pack canids. Horses are still herd beasts.
So.... in a way, you could influance the temperment possibly to a small degree. But changing the entire nature of the animal wouldn't be possible in just the domestication process.
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What if there is something to it though? Lets say you had a clutch of ball pythons, from the get go they are getting used to having been handled and acclimated. Much different from one coming from the wild, where it hatches and pretty much heads off on its own and will continue to function on that instinct to survive. Would it not be possible in theory for the part of the snakes brain that functions on fear/defense could eventually get bred out of its system? Since from such a young age they are understanding, there is no danger, only hands, food and hiding.
Like you said, it wouldn't be something that happened over night.
I dont necessarily believe in this, but in theory it sounds plausible it could happen.
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Re: philosophical tought about Darwin's theory
 Originally Posted by seang89
What if there is something to it though? Lets say you had a clutch of ball pythons, from the get go they are getting used to having been handled and acclimated. Much different from one coming from the wild, where it hatches and pretty much heads off on its own and will continue to function on that instinct to survive. Would it not be possible in theory for the part of the snakes brain that functions on fear/defense could eventually get bred out of its system? Since from such a young age they are understanding, there is no danger, only hands, food and hiding.
Like you said, it wouldn't be something that happened over night.
I dont necessarily believe in this, but in theory it sounds plausible it could happen.
Absolutely this could happen. To the dog/cat/horse theory that has been presented. Do you really think that dogs just appeared and were automatically pack animals seeking each other out? I'm sure it took time for them to evolve and realize that seeking each other out meant protection. And then in one to two thousand years we have produced tiny fluffy dogs that could barely live a day in the wild without a human feeding them. Given reptiles ARE a totally different area, but I think this is completely plausible.
Last edited by Ezekiel285; 08-28-2011 at 07:22 PM.
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I think that "unnatural" selection is already going on in captive bred snakes, exclusive of coloring.
The process of captive breeding is going to select for a different set of traits than that which nature would select for. Nature favors an animal with strong self-protective/avoidance instincts and we breed from animals which can adapt to captivity so well that they will reproduce in a setting where many wild animals won't even eat.
I don't expect an animal that not only isn't a pack animal but in which maternal nurture ends at hatch to develop dog-like affection through generations of captive breeding because the instinct isn't there to be exploited. What I do expect is to see more animals which aren't adversely affected by close contact with humans and which are increasingly tolerant of handling. IOW, animals what would have perished on the dinner buffet of nature.
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