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The Masque trait

Monty

New member
Just curious about this trait and wanted to get some insight.
From what I have read so far, it is a completely seperate trait from diffused, however plays a role in the bloodred line? This trait and gene set discovery must be fairly new because there is very limited information on it.
Has anyone ever played with it and come up with any other morphs to get out of it?

8027869937_dd6370b42b.jpg
 
I believe masque is responsible for giving Silverqueens' their distinctive look. Many times animals sold as "het bloodred" are just masque (a true bloodred is the combination of several genes).
 
I believe masque is responsible for giving Silverqueens' their distinctive look. Many times animals sold as "het bloodred" are just masque (a true bloodred is the combination of several genes).

Sorry but there isn't a combination of genes that makes a bloodred. It's one simple recessive gene.
 
Just curious about this trait and wanted to get some insight.
From what I have read so far, it is a completely seperate trait from diffused, however plays a role in the bloodred line? This trait and gene set discovery must be fairly new because there is very limited information on it.
Has anyone ever played with it and come up with any other morphs to get out of it?

8027869937_dd6370b42b.jpg

There are several threads about the masque available. I might suggest using the search feature.
 
I beg to differ Tom. I believe you are thinking of diffusion. Bloodreds are diffused+masque+borderless+redcoat/redfactor.
 
There are bloodreds with borders. Redcoat/redfactor is not required. Even masque is not required. Bloodred is, for the most part, a line bred phenomena just as sunglows, candycanes and miami-phase are line bred.
 
Sorry but there isn't a combination of genes that makes a bloodred. It's one simple recessive gene.

I have seen diffused grey/Miami coloured snakes, that was diffused but not Blood. So, the diffused gene do not make bloods.

Bloods are diffused animals selectively breed for other traits/genes like red colour etc.

The Masque trait originated in bloodreds and still many bloods have the the Masque head pattern.
 
bloods are bloods, some people differ between diffused and bloods, but for me they're all bloods. that worked the past 25 years, it will work the next 25 years for me too. :shrugs:
 
The reason people differentiate between bloodreds and diffused is because they are different. That's how the term "old-school' bloods came about, because they're no longer genetically the same. You really can't compare the two visually either. It's like outcrossing a candycane and calling the resulting amels "candycanes". I guess you can call your snakes whatever you want, but that doesn't make them that morph, no matter how long you've been doing it.
 

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diffused has the bloodred trait, bloodred has the bloodred trait. of course, old school bloods look nothing like those brownish bloods you often see meanwhile, but both carry the same trait.

it's weird that people start to rename things after such a long time. the central issue is that the "diffused"-people automatically connect the word bloodred with oldschool bloodred phenotype, but not with the non-scientific name of the gene. When I talk about bloods, I always mean the gene - not the phenotype. I believe that's the fundamental misunderstanding in that context.

afaik people start to rename bloods because they don't look red enough - under these definition I wonder what a phantom looks like or a ghost...and why nobody starts to rename those morphs too?!

it would have been much easier if it has stayed on the bloodred and oldschool bloodred status, it's just a non-scientific name such as ghost, phantom, opal or silverqueen. :shrugs:
 
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