
25-07-2008
Quote:
Originally Posted by Steve Robinson
Unfortunately Ara, no they can't - or won't.
And we're not talking "government" but "governments". Even though the Feds may relax their protocols a little there is no guarantee that the States will do likewise.
Here in Queensland [the Smart State!] we are denied keeping scores of species that are kept in zoos in other States.
Our government refuses to acknowledge that not one species of vertebrate pest in this country became so following the release or escape of that species from a zoo.
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Steve,
That says it all basically (how we Europeans feel about biosecurity). I am all for good quarantaine, vaccination and blood testing for zoonosis in exotics. And prescribed transport crates, modes, veterinary supervision and sufficient food/watering of exotics.
Just when you look at the state of cattle transport and health, you become more than mildly disturbed. Everything is allowed basically: no vet, no prescribed transport crates/modes, no sufficient watering/feeding and certainly no health checks or proper quarantaines. The other week or so cattle ranchers in The Netherlands imported young cows and heifers infected with bovine TB from the UK (where for the hell of it it is endemic in cattle - they have considered to gass badgers instead to combat it ... mind boggling and with no documented scientific basis at all).
Again, no zoo has ever been responsible here for dumping a zoonosis on this country and infecting major cattle herds nor other exotics at other zoos. This all thanx to measures as in paragraph one. Same same in Oz (allthough a portion of my Aussie forumsters still wish to disagree ... well ok it is a free world ... but, but and buts ...
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