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The pairing I've been waiting for ...

FunkyRes Mar 19, 2008 06:52 AM

Last year she did not breed.
I was a bit discouraged as she kept refusing the males this year as well - until the wee hours of this morning :D

She's a really funky snake - almost completely plain belly, and her bands are really odd as well.

I can't wait to see what the offspring look like.
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I decided my old sig was too big.

Replies (3)

RossCA Mar 19, 2008 10:36 AM

Wow, already? That's cool! I never knew that was yellow on that snake. It looked white on the photo's you sent me a couple of years ago. If its wild caught, it's definitely from coastal S.D. Co. It couldn't be from anywhere else. I remember you telling me a guy found it in northern CA or something like that. That snake is aberrant, which is caused by a mixture of the banded and striped forms, I'm sure you knew that. That's why the belly is mostly plain and the underside of the tail is mostly dark. That snake has the belly of a striper, very cool. They're only found in areas where there are striped and banded Cal kings. The closest I've ever found one like that was in the desert portion of S.D. Co. where the desert striper's turn up. It was a DOR.

FunkyRes Mar 20, 2008 06:58 AM

"That's why the belly is mostly plain and the underside of the tail is mostly dark."

That's very interesting -

The offspring of my banded amel X wc contra costa county banded male - some of the young are mostly dark under the tail and some are banded on underside tail. Every cal king I can remember finding has banded underside of tail - and I was wondering where that dark on underside of tail came from.

From what you said, if I understood you correctly, I'm guessing there's a good possibility that even though she looks like any other banded from the top, my banded amel still has some striper influence in her genes (underside of her tail is also not banded).
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I decided my old sig was too big.

FunkyRes Mar 20, 2008 07:15 AM

Both of these are her offspring from a pairing with Antioch, CA (contra costa county) male:

That one has a tail that is banded on the underside, like every Cal King I've ever found in Northern California - in Contra Costa County or Shasta County.

That one has a much different underside.

-=-

My banded amel has given me two clutches - for a total of 16 hatchlings - with the Antioch WC male, about half have the dark underside and about half have banded underside.

This year she paired with an MBK so I won't get any useful tail info.
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I decided my old sig was too big.

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