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morphs
Sept 24, 2006 18:37:07 GMT -5
Post by shiroshilo on Sept 24, 2006 18:37:07 GMT -5
just wondering what do u think i would get if i bred a male ghost corn with a female creamcicle?
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morphs
Sept 25, 2006 12:58:04 GMT -5
Post by vanderkm on Sept 25, 2006 12:58:04 GMT -5
A creamsicle is genetically identical to an amelanistic cornsnake. So the female is amel. The ghost is anery and hypo A. If neither carries the genes that the other one expresses, then you will get all normals (rootbeer because of the creamsicle background - they are hybrid and the different names indicate that). They will all carry (het for) the genes for amel, anery and hypo A.
If the ghost carries amel, you will get some creamsicles. This is quite likely as many ghosts in western Canada come from lines where amel is present.
If the creamsicle carries anery or hypo A then you will get anerys or hypo As. This is possible, though less likely - it depends on where your creamsicle is from - many do not carry other genes, but some do.
If both parents carry these genes you can get aney, amel, hypo A, as well as snow and ghost emoryi/corns. There are no good names established for the snow and ghost yet. The anerys have been referred to as fudgesicles, the snows as icicles, but those names are just getting started - there are very few of these around or advertised yet,
Just keep in mind that creamsicles are hybrids (of cornsnake and emoryi - great plains ratsnakes) and so it is important to label any offspring that they produce to make sure that people who want to buy pure cornsnakes know about the background. The creamsicles that result when creamsicles are bred to pure corn lines can be impossible to distinguish from cornsnakes because the red tones in corns overcome the orange tones of creamsicles quite readily.
mary v.
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morphs
Sept 25, 2006 13:48:41 GMT -5
Post by shiroshilo on Sept 25, 2006 13:48:41 GMT -5
ok thanx i also have a lava female anythoughts on that if i bred her with the male?
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morphs
Sept 26, 2006 9:19:59 GMT -5
Post by vanderkm on Sept 26, 2006 9:19:59 GMT -5
Breeding a female lava to the male ghost would produce normals het for anery, hypo A and lava. Lava is a distinct hypo gene that is not compatible with the hypo A that produces ghosts, although some of the lava line animals do carry the regular hypo A gene, so it is possible you would get hypo A out of that breeding - they would then be het for lava and anery. It is also possible that the lava is het anery as the anery gene is fairly common among lavas. If so, you would get anery from the breeding and these would be het for lava so in future generations you could produce ice ghosts.
Would be great to see some pics of the corns you have - sounds like a nice group,
mary v.
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morphs
Sept 30, 2006 17:52:17 GMT -5
Post by studentfrombc on Sept 30, 2006 17:52:17 GMT -5
Holy cow, this seems so complicated. I need to go back into my genetics textbooks and read up on this before I try to dive into breeding my snakes.
Good thing there are people around who can help with this kind of stuff.
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morphs
Jan 18, 2013 12:42:12 GMT -5
Post by walter6 on Jan 18, 2013 12:42:12 GMT -5
Hello Guys morphing is a unique impact that changes one picture into another through a sleek transition.The objective of morphing is to sleek the visible conversion between two molecular conformations, creating it simpler to see and comprehend the architectural variations between them.Thanks!!
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