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one eyed baby........

nuthnbutbalz Aug 23, 2008 08:57 PM

what would you do with a morph hatchling that had only one eye? it appears to be otherwise healthy. do you keep it? breed it? just looking for opinions.

Replies (6)

SPJ01 Aug 23, 2008 09:00 PM

Keep it as a pet or give it away as a pet on the condition that it never gets bred.

luvmyhydra Aug 23, 2008 09:02 PM

i'd definately not breed him, but if he is healthy, just keep him. i'd not trust giving him away, someone could breed him anyways just wanting to see if it would pass onto his babies.

amador7872 Aug 23, 2008 09:41 PM

I wouldn't try to bree him because i don't want to take the chance to pass it on to its babys. Some people will say that what about if it don't pass on but i will not play with it. So can we see a pic of the kid.

toshamc Aug 23, 2008 09:41 PM

Lots of one eyed babies out there -- they make perfectly fine pets.

I take it neither of the parents only had one eye -- it's probably a random deformity not a genetic issue -- is it a morph? Can't see why anyone would want to breed it unless it was.
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Tosha
JET Pythons

RandyRemington Aug 23, 2008 09:48 PM

I don't know for sure if it's genetic or not. There is always the chance that it is genetic so look and plan for that possibility but I wouldn't assume it definitely is.

Last year one of my normal females bred to an unrelated spider produced a clutch with several missing eyes and one also with a short lower jaw and some messed up even worse that didn't even hatch. The deformity and the defect free groups both included both spider and normal so I don’t think the spider mutation had anything to do with this problem.

I gave an eye deformity spider and two of her eye deformity normal sisters to a friend who was interested in them but he reported they all died so in our case the deformities may have included internal problems. The two eyed spider female I kept is still doing just fine.

Sure there could be a recessive gene that these unrelated animals both happened to have but I'm also considering that there could have been some sort of environmental problem, perhaps even including temperature extremes before the eggs where even laid. I'll keep an extra eye out (no pun intended) for any further problems with my girl's eggs or her decedents but with no further evidence against them I'm not ready to cull the line from my collection and if I had kept the one eyed spider and she lived I might have breed her too if I couldn’t find any evidence to support the cause being a genetic defect.

gimptafied Aug 24, 2008 08:59 PM

I'd get it a display cage and put in my living room. Even if it was just a normal. I've always had a soft spot for the freaks.
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Everyone has eaten and everyone has been eaten.

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