Joejr14 said:
Motley cannot be detected as a het. Period. End of story.
Read the post again: "There are a few morphs, such as motley and diffuse, that
sometimes can be detected when het, but
not with 100% accuracy." So, I said "sometimes" and "not with 100% accuracy". If they cannot be detected, PERIOD, how many of Susan's did I guess right??? Still waiting... Oh, that's right, I got enough right that she had to resort to claiming I cheated.
Later in the post, you decided to add that when in combonation with stripe it is nearly 100%. Well first off, when there is one motley gene, and one stripe gene, it IS 100%, not nearly. So, you were wrong on both fronts.
"Het motley, when in combination with het stripe" is nearly indistinguishable from homozygous motley, so you cannot tell, with 100% accuracy, if it is het motley and not homo motley. As well, there are motleys and motley/stripes that exhibit almost no sign other than a clear belly, making them difficult to distinguish from normal.
There is no such thing as 'bloodred' for color. Bloodred is bloodred---the gene, the overall look.
There's a lot of debate about bloodred being the overall look for a simple reason: not all diffused corns are red at all, much less bloodred. Bloodred is a selectly bred portion of diffuse. I do not accept that bloodred indicates diffuse
without questioning it because snakes are being offered for sale as bloodred that have no diffuse gene.
I'm not going to quote this entire post, but in the 'Lavender Corns....possibilities" thread, I made a response along with a few others, and literally, you came in a day later and did nothing but essentially copy exactly what was said into your own words. What was the point of that?
I certainly can't argue with a statement devoid of examples, can I?
You're new---I don't know if you're trying to impress everyone with your 25 years of genetics expertise, your sets and sub-sets, or your Boolean Algebra skills, but it's really getting old.
I realize that you and your clique expect all of the newbies to defer to your years of experience without question. Unfortunately for you, I'm not new to the subject or the underlying theories, and nothing in your posts would lead me to believe your "experience" has taught you anything greater than mine has me. What's getting old is your posturing and condesencion. "Haha, Susan PWND someone!" instills such respect, doesn't it?
A slice of humble pie would do you wonders. We all make mistakes---there's nothing wrong with that. It's obvious you understand genetics, but understand genetics doesn't mean you can understand cornsnake genetics, terms, and morphs in 2 days.
I got my first corn a year and a half ago, and have been researching the subject ever since. There is nothing special about corn snake genetics that requires a steep learning curve. As far as humble pie goes, I'll be damned if I'm going to allow snide slurs and insults to go unanswered, from you, susan, blkkat or anyone else. Far too many of you spend your time trying to find ways to demonstrate to the newbies how superior you are to them, and I'm not impressed by it. You want me to sound less arrogant? Try sounding less condescending. You want me to stop reiterating my points? Answer them with something more than your own blanket statements, insults and logical fallacies.
I have made mistakes, as well as statements that required clarification. When I've made a mistake, I've said so. When a clarification was offered, I acknowledged it. If I catch it first, I make the clarification myself. What I don't do is back down when I know my position is correct, no matter how many others decide to pile on the other side. If you can't post a response that is on point and rebuts my argument, I'm not going to give you much credence.