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  1. #1
    Hi, I'm New Here!
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    San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Hi there,

    I'm new to the site (although I've kept and bred snakes since I was a kid in the 80s).

    I have been wondering if any efforts have been made to track the relationships between T.s.tetrataenia in captivity?

    I have an 08 pair that I bought from a very responsible breeder who sourced them from The Netherlands. However, he doesn't known, for example, which captive group they are descended from (Jersey zoo? ZSL? Private breeders in the Uk/Europe?) or if they're a filial generation.

    I think those of us keeping and breeding these special snakes have a responsibility to do the best we can with the bloodlines we've got to keep the captive population healthy and genetically diverse.

    As many of you know, there is very little habitat left for these guys in San Mateo county. So although it's unlikely that our animals will ever be called upon to replenish the wild stock, if tetrataenia reaches the edge of extinction in the wild the captive bred animals will become important to conversationists.

    People interested enough in garter snakes to seek out and pay the premium for tetrataenias will often frequent sites like this. In which case, it might be possible for us to get together a register of captive snakes?

    That way we can track relationships between them going forward, allowing breeders to avoid producing heavily inbred animals. For example, a decade from now we can cherry pick animals that last shared an ancestor 4-5 generations back, and arrange swaps to keep the genepool as healthy as possible. I know that the European snakes are inbred as it is, but a lot of endangered animals have been through population bottlenecks that reduce the species to an handful of animals, and this still provides enough genetic diversity to restart a viable population.

    If we were properly organised we'd be more likely to get taken seriously by those with the power to talk to the Californian authorities and maybe even look at refreshing the stock every ten years or so with a couple of wild caught snakes. I've got a couple of contacts at ZSL so perhaps we could involve them down the line (London Zoo breed SF garters).

    What do you guys think? Do you know if anyone has tried anything like this before for this subspecies or any other threatended snake? There would be very little overhead involved in setting it up and the information would be so useful. I'd be happy to create a website if there was enough interest - or perhaps we could run it through here?

    Maybe some of you guys are way ahead of me with this - anyone know?

    Cheers

    Conners

  2. #2
    Moderator adamanteus's Avatar
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Hi Paul, and welcome to the forum.
    It is my belief that all the tetrataenia in Europe are decended from the one, single group that was originally held by Jersey Zoo. Although over the years they have 'done the rounds' a fair bit. I saw a trio in Edinburgh Zoo in the early 90s, which had come from Jersey.
    I don't think anyone has made much effort to separate the breeding lines out.... but I guess it's never too late to start! I'd certainly be interested in being involved.... although I can trace the lineage of my tetras only a few generations.
    I'm guessing that despite the flag, you're not in the US?
    James.

  3. #3
    Forum Moderator Stefan-A's Avatar
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Welcome aboard, Paul.

    I wish I could help, but I can only trace mine back to the previous owner and I'm unsure about the breeder. However, I highly doubt that the captive population will be of any use in a reintroduction programme, especially since the problem isn't that there are too few of them in the wild.


    I don't know if you'll find this link useful, but here it is anyway: http://www.thamnophis.com/archive/articles/artic3.htm

    A small excerpt from the article:
    As we have explained the total number of specimens of Thamnophis sirtalis tetrataenia in Europe are offsprings of the animals introduced to Jersey. This parietal generation of all San Francisco Garter Snakes in Europe was surely inbred, because it is possible that they all came from the Zoo in Memphis (USA) where only one pair of San Francisco Garter Snakes was kept for a long time (WEISS-GEISSLER & GEISSLER, 1995).

  4. #4
    Reptile Lady reptile3's Avatar
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Hello Paul & Welcome
    Stephanie




  5. #5
    T. radix Ranch guidofatherof5's Avatar
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Welcome to the forum, Paul
    Steve
    5 awesome kids!
    Emmy, Kale, Molly, Gabby, Hailee
    They are not just snakes. They're garter snakes.
    http://www.youtube.com/user/thamnophis14?feature=mhee

  6. #6
    Forum Moderator infernalis's Avatar
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Welcome to the forum Paul.

    Very interesting idea

  7. #7
    Hi, I'm New Here!
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Hi guys,

    Thanks for the welcome and for the encouraging responses and info.

    I'll check out the link you recommend now. I'm certainly very interested in finding out anything that's already known about the lineage going back to the Jersey animals.

    As you rightly guessed I'm not in the US (I'm in London) - must change the flag thing!

    Paul

  8. #8
    Moderator adamanteus's Avatar
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    It's always nice to welcome a fellow Brit, Paul.
    Can you trace the lineage of your tetras very far?
    I think it's a great idea that we keep future breedings as 'unrelated' as possible.... but it will be difficult to get some people on board.
    I'm up for it though. I think part of the problem is the surfeit of males..... I have a trio, one of which is female. They were already attempting to mate prior to brumation, so I'm hoping for a fruitful year..... but I'd be quite happy to exchange one of my males for a more distantly related male, if that can be figured out.
    James.

  9. #9
    Moderator adamanteus's Avatar
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Quote Originally Posted by adamanteus View Post
    I think part of the problem is the surfeit of males......

    Which makes me think....... Many of you may already be aware of 'temperature dependant sex determination' in the incubation of reptile eggs (keep them warmer = more males, keep them cooler = more females), this works for live bearing snakes too. I needed more radix females so I kept my gravid female cooler than I might have otherwise..... out of 18 young she had 17 females.
    I wonder if breeders have tried this with tetrataenia... I know I will next year.
    James.

  10. #10
    Forum Moderator infernalis's Avatar
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    Re: San Francisco Garters in Europe - family tree?

    Quote Originally Posted by adamanteus View Post
    Which makes me think....... Many of you may already be aware of 'temperature dependent sex determination' in the incubation of reptile eggs (keep them warmer = more males, keep them cooler = more females), this works for live bearing snakes too. I needed more radix females so I kept my gravid female cooler than I might have otherwise..... out of 18 young she had 17 females.
    I wonder if breeders have tried this with tetrataenia... I know I will next year.
    Thank you, Cheers, Salutations

    James that little tidbit of info just made my whole day.

    It also explains something, while my gravid eastern was gestating, I provided her with a hot rock (set on low) that she chose to sit on nearly all the time, I wound up with a litter of nearly all males.

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