do·mes·ti·cate [duh-mes-ti-keyt] Show IPA verb, do·mes·ti·cat·ed, do·mes·ti·cat·ing.
verb (used with object)
1.
to convert (animals, plants, etc.) to domestic uses; tame.
2.
to tame (an animal),
especially by generations of breeding, to live in close association with human beings as a pet or work animal and usually creating a dependency so that the animal loses its ability to live in the wild.
3.
to adapt (a plant) so as to be cultivated by and beneficial to human beings.
4.
to accustom to household life or affairs.
5.
to take (something foreign, unfamiliar, etc.) for one's own use or purposes; adopt.
They aren't domesticated to the extent that dogs and cows are, I'll give you that, but they are domesticated.
Main Entry: selective breeding
Part of Speech: n
Definition: the intentional mating of two animals in an attempt to produce offspring with desirable characteristics or for the elimination of a trait
I think you are confusing selective breeding with genetic experimentation/screaming "its alive" as lightning strikes all around. If you have a mostly blue Ambilobe, and you like that about him and want to breed him, do you just get a random female and stick her in there with him? Of course not, you
select a dam with a mostly blue sire. Not that insidious really.
no, no with chameleons anyway, no for a color or for a size or physical trade, is like someone is gonna breed blue yemen, get a panther instead, there is already blue ones
Check this out.
https://www.chameleonforums.com/madagascar-nosy-chameleons-97925/
Over fourty chams, all wild, all from nosy be. Do you see any true blues? Or even anything that looks remotely like our idea of a nosy be?
I'm not even sure what you are talking about as far as invasive species goes. You're saying thats ok then, if they don't die on an individual level but instead thrive and explode as a population and throw the whole ecosystem out of whack? Taking animals from where they are from and putting them where they are not is no bueno 99% of the time, unless you are deliberately trying to introduce a new species to fill an ecological niche that is empty for some reason (presumably because humans emptied it). Every other time, if a creature was meant to live somewhere, it would live there. Evolution is elegant like that.