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The Cultivars (morphs)/Genetics IssuesDiscussions about genetics issues and/or the various cultivars for cornsnakes commercially available.
to see if this is the WS gene at work - by test breeding to a WS ratsnake. It just looks so much like the WS gene, which we know has popped up in several species of snakes. I have heard that someone crossed WS blackrats with WS everglades and got all WS babies. Even if they are different local/subspecies/species, it is possible that the gene could be compatible. Any chance that you guys would sell a het from that breeding for test breeding to a WS ratsnake? If it is not compatible, then there would be a lot more work to determine what is going on. If it is compatible, then you would have a lot of questions answered (as far as genetics.)
and Franklin, I had the same idea! I bought some white-sided everglades to breed with a bloodred. I figured it would make some awesome red snakes, and whitesided corn (hybrids) would look cool. If you do the breeding, I would love to hear about your results. I have a 2003 and 2004 female WS glades, the 2004 is poss het hypo. Don's WS bloodreds look like what I expected the offspring to look like (some red would likely "bleed" into the white, just as it does on the WS glades, and just as it does on the belly of the bloodred.)
They are not what I expected, but better! I will be surprised if you don't see the Pied markings moving north very soon. I see a few white spots that are not on the sides already.
Could this be related to the piebald blood that Frank Pinello hatched out a couple of years ago?
if I recall, (i could be wrong) Frank Pinello's "odd" bloodred wasn't a piebald, it didn't have white...but it had lots of patches that looked "ghost-like".
but this thread also got me thinking about that animal, I'd love to see a recent picture of it! (but I don't see Frank post any more)
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