Posted by:
toshamc
at Sun Aug 19 13:55:44 2007 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by toshamc ]
I have seen that a time or two before - but one was a captive hatched baby and the other was a rescue so in both cases it's origins were unknown. It would be hard to say with any certainty whether the condition was genetic or just an anomaly. If she is feeding well then I wouldn't worry about it too much - however I don't think I would breed her - but that's just my opinion. ----- Tosha 
JET Pythons
(CJBianco explaining the origins of the BP market.)
"In the beginning Bob created the Ball Python market. And the market was without morph, and wild traits were upon the industry. And Bob said, Let there be morph, and there was morph. And Bob saw the morph, that it was good; and Bob divided the morph from the wild trait. And Bob called the morph Albino, and the wild trait Normal. And the Albino and the Heterozygous Albino were the first investment.
-- Christopher 1:1-1:5"
[ Hide Replies ]
|