LauRuffian
Perpetual Newbie
Geez, what a year. My last clutch was due to hatch last week. This was from my first time pairing of my ghost het amel, 50% het motley (bred by Susan Willis) female to my ghost stripe 66% het amel, dilute male (also from Susan Willis). She laid what I considered a massive first-year clutch of 25 eggs, but most were slugs. Only 11 appeared viable and of which, only 8 candled fertile. Over the weeks of incubation, I watched those die off one at a time until I was left with just 3 good eggs come day 55.
At day 72 I noticed changes that I hope suggested pipping in two of the eggs, but alas, it was due to the babies being DIE. Removing them, both snow/coral snow babies were horribly deformed. The first clearly died earlier in development and seemed fused at the center, with many of its organs appearing outside the body:
The second baby appears pretty close to full term, but is similarly (though not as severely) deformed in the center:
Obviously, I'm not holding out a lot of hope for that last egg. At least I proved the male is 100% het amel, but...yeeeeesh.
I'm trying to determine if the disaster is due to incubation or just a baaaaad genetic combination between my male and female. FWIW, I was already planning on breeding them to different snakes next year, but obviously if it's environmental I'd like to do what I can to prevent such a disaster--especially since the male might be bred to my son's beloved girl for her first season.
Details: Eggs were incubated in an Exo-Terra fridge-style incubator on the top shelf. I bought the incubator last year because it cools as well as heats--important in Southern California. It was set to 84 but actual temps on the shelf containing these eggs was about 81.7ish, with a couple of hot days bumping it to about 85 or so but never above that I observed. I did notice the egg box seemed to have a lot more moisture on the sides than I've seen with other clutches, but there wasn't much in the way of mold so I wasn't concerned. My other clutch in with this one had about the same hatch rate as the same pairing produced last year, with one DIE (that I'm pretty sure is due to the location of the egg--buried on the bottom of an egg-pyramid and the baby couldn't fully pip through) and one runt that died 24 hours after hatching. The remaining hatchlings are healthy (no deformities/kinks, etc.) and all ate at first asking.
Both of the snakes are registered with the American Corn Snake Registry and their pedigrees can be seen here:
Male, Theo
Female, Alina
While they are not siblings, there is some inbreeding; their fathers were full brothers a few years apart, for one. Still, this is not unusual in this hobby. Next year I intend to breed them both to completely unrelated snakes (Alina to an ultramel anery tessera, Theo to an amel het motley.)
So the essence of my question is: Is there a way to determine whether this disastrous clutch was due nature (catastrophic genetics) or nurture (incubation issues)?
At day 72 I noticed changes that I hope suggested pipping in two of the eggs, but alas, it was due to the babies being DIE. Removing them, both snow/coral snow babies were horribly deformed. The first clearly died earlier in development and seemed fused at the center, with many of its organs appearing outside the body:
The second baby appears pretty close to full term, but is similarly (though not as severely) deformed in the center:
Obviously, I'm not holding out a lot of hope for that last egg. At least I proved the male is 100% het amel, but...yeeeeesh.
I'm trying to determine if the disaster is due to incubation or just a baaaaad genetic combination between my male and female. FWIW, I was already planning on breeding them to different snakes next year, but obviously if it's environmental I'd like to do what I can to prevent such a disaster--especially since the male might be bred to my son's beloved girl for her first season.
Details: Eggs were incubated in an Exo-Terra fridge-style incubator on the top shelf. I bought the incubator last year because it cools as well as heats--important in Southern California. It was set to 84 but actual temps on the shelf containing these eggs was about 81.7ish, with a couple of hot days bumping it to about 85 or so but never above that I observed. I did notice the egg box seemed to have a lot more moisture on the sides than I've seen with other clutches, but there wasn't much in the way of mold so I wasn't concerned. My other clutch in with this one had about the same hatch rate as the same pairing produced last year, with one DIE (that I'm pretty sure is due to the location of the egg--buried on the bottom of an egg-pyramid and the baby couldn't fully pip through) and one runt that died 24 hours after hatching. The remaining hatchlings are healthy (no deformities/kinks, etc.) and all ate at first asking.
Both of the snakes are registered with the American Corn Snake Registry and their pedigrees can be seen here:
Male, Theo
Female, Alina
While they are not siblings, there is some inbreeding; their fathers were full brothers a few years apart, for one. Still, this is not unusual in this hobby. Next year I intend to breed them both to completely unrelated snakes (Alina to an ultramel anery tessera, Theo to an amel het motley.)
So the essence of my question is: Is there a way to determine whether this disastrous clutch was due nature (catastrophic genetics) or nurture (incubation issues)?