JFDery
New member
I'm curious as to why "T+ albino" is more "useless" than the term "ultra"?
I know that "ultra" is the accepted trade name of the morph in cornsnakes, but...T+albino is a FAR more accurate and descriptive term, in every avenue of snakes wherein it is used.
If you ask me, the made-up word "ultra" is FAR more useless than the more scientific name of "T+albino"...
I mean really...for people that get so worked up about accuracy and usefulness...you would think that accurately descriptive words would be preferred to made-up jangle. In other words..."a form of alibnism that still produces a variable amount of melanin-like pigment due to the presence of tyrosinase"(T+albino) is WAY more accurate than "better than normal"(ultra).
The term T+albino is not a useless term, it is an accurate and descriptive term of what is most likely happening with the ultra gene. Just because it isn't the "accepted trade name in cornsnakes" does not in any way make useless or inaccurate...:nope:
How do you explain that T+ is more accurate than Ultra? Even if Ultra is a trade name, it still designates a specific phenotype, which can easily be described as a type of hypomelanism (in the generic sense, ie. reduction of melanin production). In a sense, it is accurate to say that Ultras are tyrosinase positive EVEN if you didn't run a test, since otherwise you wouldn't see any melanin. In other words T+ is the normal result for anything that produces melanin. So in that sense, it brings no more useful information than ultra, or hypomelanism, or ultra-hypomelanism.
If you were to test an amelanistic mutant as tyrosinase positive, then T+ is useful information: it tells you the cause of amelanism is NOT due to a failure to produce tyrosinase, which would be exceptional.
If you were to test an animal that is not amelanistic (such as Ultra or any morph that has melanin) as tyrosinase negative, then you again have very useful (and NEW) information.
T+ is a way to note the result of the L-Dopa test, it's not a color or melanin intensity. For these reasons, personally, I would avoid using T+ to describe anything else than a tested T+ amelanistic animal or tested T+ individual that has such diminished melanin that it’s not clear if were dealing with amelanism or not. This is actually how it's used in mammalian studies (including human dermatology) and mainly for two reasons: 1- mammalian coloration is essentially melanin; 2-phenotypical differences between individuals producing extremely low quantities of melanin and absolutely none are not always so obvious. Detecting tyrosinase activity with an L-Dopa test is easier, faster, and more economical than identifying cutaneous melanins.