Posted by:
amazondoc
at Fri Jul 2 16:48:45 2010 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by amazondoc ]
>>I cant believe how many people seem to think this is a cornsnake.
It's obvious that they think it's a cornsnake because it LOOKS like a cornsnake. Even milks of "normal" types can look like corns, and this mutation looks just about exactly like the known ultramel morph in corns.
>>It is clearly a milksnake.
Why?? What specifically makes it "clearly" a milk? Which morphological features? I'm very happy to learn more about such things, but simply saying "clearly" is not a convincing argument to me.
>>How would an ultramel corn get into my backyard?
The same way an eastern milk mutation would get into your yard -- by being born there, or slithering in.
>>We dont have corns here, at all...
Since I don't know where you are located, I obviously can't judge this point. Where are you? ----- ----
0.1 Peruvian rainbow boa (Amaru)
2.0 Brazilian rainbow boas (Arco, Olho)
0.3 Honduran milksnakes (Chicchan, Chanir, Hari)
1.0 Thayeri kingsnake (Coatl)
0.0.1 Mexican black kingsnake (TBA)
2.7 corns (Cetto, Tolosa, Uce, TBA)
1,000,000.1,000,000 other critters
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