no give them to someone you know or a petshop
You can't. It's already flowing in their blood, and mostly all of them have it now, except for tame, captive-bred mice that people keep as pets. Don't try to cure a wild mouse of disease.
yes they can
Yes, the California Condor is one of the most endangered birds; In 1980 there were fewer than 25 birds left in the wild. Captive breeding programs were established, and the first captive-bred California Condors, were released into the wild in 1992.
Yes all breads of snakes where originally wild snakes even if you get a captive bred snake.
The easiest method is through a breeder. Depending on where you live there might be some in your area, but most of them will ship to you. The advantages to getting a snake from a breeder vs. a local pet shop are many but primarily it comes down to the health of the animal and the knowledge of a good breeder to get you the animal that will best suit you.Be sure that you get a captive bred snake and not a wild caught or captive hatched specimen. A captive bred animal is one that came from parents that were bred in captivity. A captive hatched animal comes from parents that bred in the wild but the off spring was born (or hatched) in captivity, and a wild caught snake was caught "in the jungle", sold to a pet shop and then sold to you.The reason for avoiding the captive hatched and wild caught animals is twofold. First they are often more temperamental than their captive bred siblings. Secondly they often have health issues, particularly the wild caught ones that have all kinds of parasites and bugs.
It's best not to
Wild mice typically live in fields, forests, and grasslands, while domesticated mice are bred to be kept as pets. Wild mice have a shorter lifespan than domesticated mice due to predators and harsh environmental conditions. Domesticated mice have been selectively bred over generations to have specific traits such as coat color and behavior, making them different from their wild counterparts.
Not all mice are wild. You can buy domestic mice from a pet shop, they have been bred to be tame. Though most mice are wild, they are the kind that live outside and sometimes in people's houses. Wild mice are pests because they can endanger native animals and invade people's houses. Pet mice are actually really good though.
Captive bred - ALWAYS ! Certain species of reptiles are becoming scarce or even extinct in the wild - due to people capturing them for the 'pet' trade. EVERY animal species has a right to live on this planet. Removing wild reptiles simply reduces the numbers remaining. There are more than enough reptiles bred in captivity to sustain suitable numbers for collectors. Besides which - captive bred specimens are always healthier than their wild-caught counterparts !
You don't. You spend an extra 20 bucks buying a captive bred pet and not hurting your ecosystem.
Captive bred specimens rarely suffer from parasites - HOWEVER wild-caught lizards can have an infestation of ticks or mites.
no pet hedgehogs bite only the wild hedgehogs bite but if they are captive bred they are used to humans and they wont bite