Posted by:
BrandonD
at Tue Jul 17 22:43:38 2012 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by BrandonD ]
Awesome post completly absurd they thought those taylori were pyro crosses you could find that amount of crossovers in a central ks gentilis, very variable snakes those western milks are and when I say western milks I mean celaenops, multistrata, taylori, and gentilis, all very similar, just like annulata are a bit similar to amaura, and that syspila, temporalis(east coast syspila that got seperated by triangulum), and triangulum can be a bit similar I call these the east side triangulum and amaura and annulata the south side. the only thing is when it comes to the west side milks only the extreme geographics really stand out, and you get a bit of a "big" mix in between each one. Awesome post regardless and would love to see more, especially in my collection lol
at any rate
Cheers
Brandon DeCavele

[ Hide Replies ]
- Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - Paul Lynum, Tue Jul 17 15:21:09 2012
- RE: Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - Shredderbabe, Tue Jul 17 15:56:35 2012
- RE: Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - tspuckler, Tue Jul 17 16:18:54 2012
- RE: Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - RG, Tue Jul 17 16:42:52 2012
- RE: Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - Dniles, Tue Jul 17 20:38:10 2012
RE: Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - BrandonD, Tue Jul 17 22:43:38 2012 
- RE: Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - Jason Nelson, Tue Jul 17 23:04:29 2012
- RE: Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - John Fraser, Wed Jul 18 19:51:12 2012
- Good post, Paul! n/p - SunHerp, Sat Jul 21 18:17:24 2012
- RE: Arizona, UT, and Nevada Milk Snakes - snake_bit, Thu Jul 26 06:56:43 2012
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