Posted by:
orchidspider
at Mon Nov 8 21:57:20 2010 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by orchidspider ]
I read that Ratsnakes do that as a camoflage way of avoiding attention of predators in Tenant's book. I nocticed the nice amount of orange between the scales in the large black rat, and I have seen that in the Blacks down here in Charlotte, NC also, yet in the western NC mts near Asheville and Hendersonville, they are all black with just some white, and those are the ones I work with. The orange coloring is very nice though! ----- BULLS: Pr normal (KS&TX), 1 Pr Northern (M Medicine Hat, Alberta, Canada & F Minn), Pr Kankakee Co, Ill, CORNS: Pr Okeetee, SC, FOXES: Pr Western, KINGS: Pr Black Eastern (L.g.nigra) Todd Co. KY, Pr. NC Eastern Chains (M from Union Co. & F from Mecklenburg Co.), Pr."Goini", Franklin Co. Fla, Pr. Costal Banded Cal (M Hypo & F normal) Pr Speckled, Harris Co. TX, PINES: Pr Louisiana (pure descendants of Terry Vandeventer stock), Pr Southern (F light & M- Aiken, SC), PYTHONS: Pr normal Ball, RATS: Pr Black, Henderson Co. NC, Pr Black (M White Side & F Leucistic), Western Green, F (Mt. Hopkins, Cochise Co. AZ), OTHERS: 10 Tarantulas, 150 Orchid plants, 40 assorted tropical plants and violets, 3 Freshwater Planted Aquariums with West African Dwarf Cichlids and 2 condo-porch gardens with Bonsai, Roses and etc...
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