I was going to rant ....which I still might do...but it appears some of the replies to the rants I intended to make have already been replied... :spinner:
As a service for tracking lineage, it's no more accurate than trusting the person you're buying from.
D80
AND....
Rich Z said:
The most insurmountable problem is the fact that any system will be subject to a "garbage in, garbage out" situation. Not only the matter of incorrect data, but cases of blatant lying about the genetic makeup and ancestry. Since there is really no way to VERIFY the provided information, it's value to anyone would be limited only to those people providing the information that you personally trusted.
And that is the big truth! If Snakeman Steve sells you a corn that is supposedly 'het' for orange blaze morph you've got to trust him. If someone sells you a snake with ACR paperwork that claims the snake is 'het' for orange blaze you've got to trust the paperwork. Same scenario.
However, an advantage to the ACR is if the snake is a double or triple het morph it gets a little harder to fake the paperwork....
especially if more than the original parents are registered. If you can see great, great grandpa had gene 1 and a grandmother had gene 2 then you can trace the genes through paperwork snakes. Granted, people can still fake the paperwork to show the gene they want but with paperwork going back multiple years AND registered at different times the faking is harder. Snakeman Steve will just tell you I bred it and this is the way it is and if the reputation isn't there, then the sell is much harder.
See Susan's comment as well:
As for the honesty in the genetics listed in the registry being only as good as the honesty of the person doing the registration, that is correct, but that is something people have to deal with with ANY registrations of ANY creature. There is no way other than the breeder's word to verify that this male is the father of that puppy/kitten/horse/cow/sheep/snake/whatever.
New Rant...
So how do you name/number your animals? Do you change names/numbers when you aquire registered animals from other breeders. Why?
As far as the name changing....it will always say in the produced section of the ACR who produced it no matter what the name was changed to. And I do change names of most of the snakes I register that were registered with a different name. Not always....but mostly.
See also:
the ACR will still have the record of who produced it - that doesn't change.
New Rant:
I can distinctly remember having the domain name CornSnakeRegistry.com all ready to register.
Interesting....
Rich Z said:
Another issue was the problem of workload. Quite frankly, any system that required ANY workload at all, would likely be too much of an additional burden for the people whose input would be most valuable to the system because of the VOLUME of the data THEY could provide. Seriously, when I have 3,000 to 7,000 babies hatching out, the very LAST thing I need is even more work to do. So no matter how valuable (or interesting) such a system might be to some, the time involved and workload needed just will not be available WHEN it is needed. And once the majority of the babies have been sold and some time is then available, what is the sense of doing the record keeping at that late date in the season when most of the babies are now gone?
Correct. Workload is a bugger. The intent of the ACR is so your workload is ALL ACR related. If you change your in house records to reflect the ACR records then the pre-registration stickers for the hatchlings would reflect all needed data from the crosses and you would just slap a sticker on the cage and go for it. In fact, with the ACR you can name your snake using your IN HOUSE name and then ALL the information (your in house info AND ACR info) would be on a preregistration sticker. The biggest workload is the initial transition and match-up of old snakes and names to the new names.
Taking the pictures is another straw on your workload camel's back. There is no easy way around this. Taking pictures to register animals takes time....a lot of time if you have a lot of snakes. Yep....time. However, a plus side is you now have a photo record of every snake you've registered. Might be kind of neat when you look back 10 years from now at some of the breeders you had. Plus...as stated above...although records can be faked...hard to fake a 'het stripe' animal if the parents aren't stripe in their pictures.
New Rant...
Rich Z said:
Then there is cost. No one would do something like this for free. But even if registration were a minimal $1 per head, assuming the above concerns were not valid, why would anyone producing 3,000+ animals want to spend another $3,000+ on registration, adding to the overhead for snakes where every year buyers seemingly expect the prices to be LOWER than they were last year?
Ah yes...one of the biggest limitations to such a system!!! Several people have indicated that the cost is why they have stopped. I agree. I, too, have resisted registering additional animals due to costs. In fact, last year I registered around $75-100 in snakes but I left off a good number that did not give me good eggs last year or weren't ready to breed. I basically pay to register what is producing that year.
In Rich's example, I totally agree that the cost of registering the babies for that much money would be crazy! That being said, the ACR doesn't expect you to do that. Granted it is a limitation in a sense, but the ACR suggests to pass the information on and the new owner will pay the cost of the registration. That way the breeder does not have to do it. Still doesn't solve the workload issue or the holdback issue but it does stop an initial cost of registration overwhelming a breeder.
And lastly...
Rich Z said:
Lastly, and perhaps overlooked quite often, is the fact that many people are doing projects that they would really rather not have made public before reaching fruition. Certainly I have several such projects ongoing, so I assume other people do as well. Why would people engaging in such projects want to make it public in a registry? So if they don't, how can ANY of the animals related to those projects be registered with accurate information without tipping their hand on what they are working on? They either have to exclude even the culls from those projects from the registry, or falsify, at least partially, the information they provide about them.
Yep. I have no reply to this. It is an aspect of the registry that is limited. If you want to keep a project secret....a public registry is not the answer. In a case like this, the ACR suggests:
ACR said:
Q- What if I want to register all of my snakes, but I have a secret project and I do not want the genetics of a particular snake to be known?
A- If you wish to register any of your snakes with only an ID number, name, etc, but no genetic information, that is allowed. This will allow the progeny to be traced back to the originator(s) of the bloodline once the "secret ingredients" become known.
I am still currently using the system and still plan to do so in the future. I have yet to see a financial advantage to selling my registered animals or getting more money from registered animals. I have, however, been able to track animals in my collection that go back several years to see where the genes have been hiding. In my case, the dilute gene appears to have popped up and I've been able to find out which female had that. Sure, any records system could do this but it was made easy by the ACR. I could have used my in house records to trace the animals back but when I went to the page where the parents of the dilute animal was produced...it was easy to see the shared great grandmother was het.
I do not think the ACR is the answer for every breeder. I also do not allude that it is an infallible system...it is made by humans who insert data given to them by humans. I am merely offering a different view on a system that works for me just as many of you have said why it does not work for you.
Okay...I'm done.
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