return to main index

  mobile - desktop
follow us on facebook follow us on twitter follow us on YouTube link to us on LinkedIn
International Reptile Conservation Foundation  
click here for Rodent Pro
This Space Available
3 months for $50.00
Locate a business by name: click to list your business
search the classifieds. buy an account
events by zip code list an event
Search the forums             Search in:
News & Events: Herp Photo of the Day: Hognose . . . . . . . . . .  Herp Photo of the Day: Chameleon . . . . . . . . . .  Colorado Herp Society Meeting - July 19, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  Chicago Herpetological Society Meeting - July 20, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  Bay Area Herpetological Society Meeting - July 25, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  Suncoast Herp Society Meeting - July 26, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  DFW Herp Society Meeting - July 26, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  Tucson Herpetological Society Meeting - July 28, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  Southwestern Herp Society Meeting - Aug 02, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  Greater Cincinnati Herp Society Meeting - Aug 06, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  St. Louis Herpetological Society - Aug 10, 2025 . . . . . . . . . .  Kentucky Reptile Expo - Aug. 16, 2025 . . . . . . . . . . 
Join USARK - Fight for your rights!
full banner - advertise here .50¢/1000 views
click here for Rodent Pro
pool banner - $50 year

RE: What frog is this? Morph?

[ Login ] [ User Prefs ] [ Search Forums ] [ Back to Main Page ] [ Back to Dart & Mantella Frogs ] [ Reply To This Message ]
[ Register to Post ]

Posted by: Slaytonp at Sun Jun 24 19:52:59 2007  [ Report Abuse ] [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by Slaytonp ]  
   

Well, I finally got us an answer from the horse's mouth--Sean Stewart, who was kind enough to write back to me about this morph:

"The splashed back dart frog was named galactonotus or 'milk-back' for good reason. Some of these orange galacts when they metamorphose have a white back. That white back fades into orange and yellow spots as they age. A small percentage of adults retain this white juvenile color with its adult orange and they look like a koi fish. I coined the name "Koi" to describe a line of orange galacts that I was working with in the late 1990's. This line I bought from a small collector in Holland. I bred them and sold a bunch years ago. It probably represents a distinct location of orange galacts in Brazil somewhere." In other research I did, it was suggested that they were from Goias, Maranhao or Para, which I may already have mentioned.

So they are not an abnormal mutation, nor a fungus, but a genetic anomaly in a population of splash-back orange galactonotus, which as Sean points out, the species was actually named after.
-----
Patty
Pahsimeroi, Idaho

D. auratus blue, auratus Ancon Hill, galactonotus orange, galactonotus yellow, fantasticus, reticulatus, imitator, castaneoticus, azureus, pumilio Bastimentos. P. lugubris, vittatus, terribilis mint green, terribilis orange.


   

[ Reply To This Message ] [ Subscribe to this Thread ] [ Hide Replies ]


>> Next topic:  Fruit Fly delevery in florida - ShinyScales, Fri Jun 22 22:45:07 2007
<< Previous topic:  Grouping & Mixing Species Question - frogger, Mon Jun 18 00:03:22 2007