Reptile & Amphibian Forums

Welcome to kingsnake.com's message board system. Here you may share and discuss information with others about your favorite reptile and amphibian related topics such as care and feeding, caging requirements, permits and licenses, and more. Launched in 1997, the kingsnake.com message board system is one of the oldest and largest systems on the internet.

Colombian/C.A. MOTLEY QUESTION

reptimals Jul 19, 2006 06:33 PM

i thought that colombian super motleys produced a purple patternless boa and that the central american motleys produced a black patternless boa .. i see several super motleys being born that i think are the colombian form but are producing black patternless instead of what i thought was suppose to be purple patternless...

WHATS GOING ON HERE?? .. A LITTLE HELP PLEASE !!!

do both lines produce black patternless???

thanks

Replies (2)

ajfreptiles Jul 19, 2006 09:47 PM

What if the purple patternless is a T positive??

I wonder???

It's actually making alot more sense to ma latley....

That's my theory...of course I would just love to hear others...

Andy Federico
-----

bcijoe Jul 20, 2006 01:49 PM

I think there are many factors contributing to this...

Yes, the first of each that we saw, at the time we saw them, were purple and black.

To me, expecting everyone to look the same would be amost like expecting every salmon to have the same color, or every albino.

I think the color for these supers depend on many things:
color of adults
pattern of adults
predominant color in bloodline of the adults used to produce the parents
predominant pattern in some bloodlines used to create these and/or their adults
vanishing pattern in any of the bloodlines
increasing color in any of the bloodlines
and obviously whether or not there is central american influence...

and with the centrals, there may be even more variation...

there are many different locatities of Centrals and many of them are very different in color...

I see nics that are orangish brown..
I see mexicans that are greyish or a dull dark color
I see Costa Ricans that are greenish to tan
I see Hondurans that are olive, greenish, light grey, or bright orange
I see some others that are copperish in color, or steel blue in color, and so on...

They also have varying pattern.. some very heavy, some very light, almost always bold...

So unless you are using the exact same adults Jeremy used to produce those patternless animals, or that Alex used to produce his, I would expect them to have some variation...

We may have seen these kids before shed, or after first shed, or with their birth skin still making them look smokey in appearance.

either way, it's a solid colored snake that's just UNREAL!!!!

See you in Daytona!

-Joe
-----
Thanks and take care - Joe Rollo
'Tis not the stongest of the species that will eventually survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change' Charles Darwin

Site Tools