- Joined
- Jul 7, 2005
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- 3,200
While I mistakenly used the term sterilization in my first post, I corrected it in my 2nd or 3rd post...somewhere around there.nice, moving the goalposts....until now, the term disinfecting hasnt even come up...we are talking about sterilization here.
So, no, I've been using the term correctly for a few posts now. Didn't initially, but did correct myself several times before this post.
For example:
You even responded to a post using the corrected language:If we're arguing from anecdotes, I disinfect all enclosures with 5% bleach between uses and bake all wood before and after putting it in an enclosure. I don't reuse substrate. I've never had the mould problems Marshall describes.
I'm sure that most hobbiests have some sort of disinfection protocol. A search for bleach yields quite a few results, which implies that it's common practice to disinfect enclosures/materials between uses.
Having worked in many rearing facilities from academia, industry, and government, I can tell you that sanitation protocols are used to prevent excess deaths. I mean, sure, experiments aren't valid if half your critters die...but that's why sanitation is needed. It's even explicitly in the training materials given to new employees at some institutions. Without these protocols, insect rearing on scale would not be possible.

Even then, this isn't the first time I described specific protocols...protocols which are VERY far from the sort of sterile rearing you seem to think I'm describing.
And yet a discussion of simple cleaning procedures has become a debate about axenic/sterile rearing.I never said things shouldnt be kept clean, I said they dont need to be sterilized.
As I said earlier, it's just weird.
I mean, I get your argument but you're looking at a situation where less than 1% of animals survive, no matter how you slice it. I've worked with Diabrotica in the lab, and a lot of them reared on artificial diets succumb to bacterial growth passed on by the substrate the eggs were laid in. Survival for them means that a hundred million become a few million. This is just not convincing because it's plain to see that dirty environments aren't good for critters, even when they're adapted to living there.I was NOT IN ANY WAY comparing the two, I was stating that they CAN live in places most other living things cant, showing they have a significant resilience to things other animals won't....of course captive animals live longer, that's not the discussion here
When someone reacts this way to a simple description of sanitization procedures, and then turns it into a semantic argument...that is not making a reach.I am also not saying to not clean things, or keep enclosures clean, I dont know how you are even making that reach.....I am saying, sterilization isnt something that will optimize care, because its unnecessary and can actually cause complications.
I mean, there's literally a post about (perceived) nematodes in the forum right now. So rare doesn't mean nonexistent.If they are probably rare, as would be shown by the total and complete lack of any evidence suggesting otherwise, then why would it be a concern. Look, I can reduce my chances of getting hit by lightning by always walking on rubber surfaces, but that doesn't mean I would be in danger if I don't. My point is that we shouldn't be worrying about things that are virtually unheard of.
There are a few threads around here where keepers lose multiple specimens in quick succession (I did link one example earlier), and it's always chalked up to poor husbandry without any real questioning about the circumstances. Just because proving disease is impossible for virtually everyone in the hobby, doesn't mean diseases don't exist in the hobby. We almost certainly overlook outbreaks.
Whatever combination of letters you want to use-sanitize, disinfect, clean-it's not a bad idea.
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