Posted by:
M n R-Reptile
at Sun Aug 8 23:24:03 2004 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by M n R-Reptile ]
An albino boa has changed from the typical grey overall body color and tannish/black saddles and red on tail to an overall white color, orange saddles and red on tail turns orange as well. Teh black outline around the tail saddles on a normal turn bright white so I think you are right in assuming it will produce a kind of leucistic looking animal sine it is not a melanistic boa but a color/pattern variation from a co-dom gene.
Its the super of ca motley to ca motley.
Its probably the most outstandign looking snake ever produced in the boa world. A black boa, now when is my guy in colombia going to send me a leucistic? lol.
I like the colombian super but a solid black one to me is more impressive. A 5 foot solid thick looking animal, WHAT!!!
Anyways, it would be cool though that if crossed with an albino it would be all orange as technically since it seems to be a fusion of the saddles makign it completey just one big saddle(get what i am saying) then since albino boas have orange saddles, hmmmmm SOLID ORANGE SNAKE, i got my money on that......seems to be after a thought that a super motley is a fusion of all pattern on the snake which makes it a solid black color......we shall see, please tell me Alex that it is a boy?!! ----- "Quality isn't Quality without customer service so I guess I sell quality"
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