Posted by:
Carmichael
at Thu Sep 29 06:26:43 2005 [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by Carmichael ]
I have had a couple of indigos hatch that look very similar to this; we don't know if it is due to incubation temp fluctuations, or, genetic; but we're working on it. The few that we had over the years that ended up like this grew into wonderful animals but we decided to not put them back into our breeding program until we can have a better idea on what caused it.
Rob Carmichael, Curator
The Wildlife Discovery Center
Lake Forest, IL
>>It doesn't look like a typical indigo at all. Although the cause is probably different, it reminds me of way adult cornsnakes can get in captivity, with extremely broad body at the cloaca and abruptly tapering tail. ----- Rob Carmichael, Curator
The Wildlife Discovery Center at Elawa Farm
Lake Forest, IL
[ Show Entire Thread ]
|