Bekah Huggins
snake obsessed.
My book says cornsnakes are just a different rat snake,
Can they reproduce?
If so is it wrong to mix them?
Can they reproduce?
If so is it wrong to mix them?
That's just your opinion though. I'm not criticizing it, because for the most part, I share your opinion. But there's nothing wrong with creating hybrids, as long as you're honest when labeling them for sale. You can't even say that it's unnatural, since it happens in the wild. In fact, we have no idea how many non-corn genes our "pure" corns may be carrying.Dave123 said:Yes, cornsnakes can also be called red rat snakes and yes that can reproduce. You can cross corns with some other species but I would really keep it between corns and corns.
Roy Munson said:That's just your opinion though. I'm not criticizing it, because for the most part, I share your opinion. But there's nothing wrong with creating hybrids, as long as you're honest when labeling them for sale. You can't even say that it's unnatural, since it happens in the wild. In fact, we have no idea how many non-corn genes our "pure" corns may be carrying.![]()
Hybrids are crosses between two separate species. So if you cross a corn (Pantherophis guttatus) to a black rat snake (Pantherophis obsoleta), you would produce corn/black rat hybrids. Jungle corns are a cross of two even more distantly related species, corns and California kingsnakes. Corns and black rats share a genus (Pantherophis), but California kingsnakes are in a separate genus (Lampropeltis) from both of them. But the more unrelated two species are, the less likely it is that they can hybridize. You couldn't produce viable offspring in a cross between a corn and a cobra, or a boa, or a viper.Dave123 said:Are hybrids what you get when you cross a corn with another kind of snake? Well I was not trying to say it was bad but looks like I did. Like jungle corns are corns and some other kind but I didn't want anyone to get the idea to cross a corn with any kind of snake they could think of. Still not too sure what Bekah Huggins was asking though. Ohh well listen to Dean he is way more experienced.![]()
Roy Munson said:You couldn't produce viable offspring in a cross between a corn and a cobra,
You can't predict how the genes will shuffle in these crosses. It seems that most of the first generation corn x king hybrids I've seen look like a fairly even blend of the parent species' characteristics. If you cross these siblings together, you'd probably get similar snakes to the sibling parents. If you wanted to produce snakes that had more corn influence, you could breed a 50/50 corn/king with a "pure" corn to produce 75/25 corn/kings. Same goes for increasing the king influence.Bekah Huggins said:Interesting, ok at a local pet store down the street they have corn-milksnake hybrids; What would come mixing these with corn-king hybrids?
A new species or would corn dominate? :eek1:
Bekah Huggins said:I'm going to try this in the future.![]()
Hypancistrus said:Can I ask why? What will your goals be in pursuing this??
I have never been a fan of hybrid animals. :shrugs: We see a few varieties of hybrid fish in the aquarium trade, and they all look deformed and ugly to me. It also bothers me because of the issue of bloodlines. Even if you clearly label them as hybrids, if Joe Schmoe down the street buys them and breeds them, will he label them as such? Or will he sell them as pure Corns / pure Kings to some unsuspecting buyer? :eek1: The whole idea has just never sat well with me for some reason.
Although most hobbyists refer to them as "hybrids", many are merely intergrades, breedings between animals of the same species but differing subspecies. There are ongoing conversations within herpetologists about the actual relationships between the different New World rat snakes. The fact that the offspring of breeding an emoryi to a g. guttata are fertile would weigh on the side of them being separate subspecies rather than separate species. The difference between the two appears more in line with the difference between a chihuahua and a cocker spaniel than the difference between a rabbit and a mink.CaptainJack said:So are reptile hybrids a lot more fertile than mammal hybrids? Like mules are horse/donkey hybrids and they are almost always unable to breed. I remember once a lady I knew who ran a horse rescue got in two mules and put them in a pen with some stallions because she thought all mules were infertile and both of them ended up pregnant. Before that I actually thought they were all infertile too.
gwb8568 said:hibirds aer teh kewl..............they are in the wild and should not be considered anything new. breeding a male donkey to a female horse results in a mule and those have been around forever. as for the re-selling or misrepresentation, that would have to do with the persons overall etiquette. there have been many automobiles sold as "never wrecked" that might have even had parts from other vehicles used to repair it. it's just all a part of society and business in general. yeah, there will always be some people who screw up the system to benefit themselves without a care in the world about the outcome or the future.