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Pink Snake?

Not a problem For all that want to see the adults I do have a video that might help out. Sorry about the delaying of the photos I am feeding 14 little guys. lol


The Snow (father) looks like a regular Snow.
Is that the mother, of the clutch, on top of his tank? If so, it looks like she is a Striped Hypo (or Motley-Stripe Hypo ... cannot see her dorsal). Also, if the Striped Ghost hatchling is part of the same clutch, the father must be het Striped (as well as being het Hypo).
Mother, of course, would be het Amel & Anery.
 
Yes that is the mother. I am going to be posting another video of her again soon including all of her. Also to note if it makes it a big difference or not, her underside is patternless, no checking at all.
 
Is that the mother, of the clutch, on top of his tank? If so, it looks like she is a Striped Hypo (or Motley-Stripe Hypo ... cannot see her dorsal).

To clarify what I stated (above) ... It is obvious that she is either a Stripe or a Motley-Stripe. However, cannot see her dorsal pattern in order to state, with 100% accuracy, as to which of those two she is.
Also, she appears to be a Hypo (vs. Normal).
 
Ok, understood, Thank you. I will post the video here as soon as possible. However, I must note that she does not look like a motley, nor does she have a stripe going down her dorsal.
 
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/2wxic9Hd8UA" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
Looks like a motley to me...Motley plays a little bit with coloration; it can act like the hypo gene to some extent.
 
I am voting for the female to be Motley/stripe het amel, anery & hypo. Also voting on the male being snow het hypo stripe. I think they look great.
 
She is a Motley-Stripe.
Has the Motley phenotype but carrying the genes for both Motley and Stripe.
The reason I say she is Motley-Stripe, vs. Motley, is because she would not have produced a Striped baby if she were only Motley.
 
She is a Motley-Stripe.
Has the Motley phenotype but carrying the genes for both Motley and Stripe.
The reason I say she is Motley-Stripe, vs. Motley, is because she would not have produced a Striped baby if she were only Motley.

Makes sense. Thank You for helping out so much with that. Now back to the question.lol.
Is this why possibly I have a pink snow, because of the hypo in the female?
 
It has been speculated that hypo can have an affect on snows, causing them to be more pink. Would I say without a doubt that hypo is the only thing making your snow real pink? Probably not because there are a lot of hypo snows that look standard. But hypo does look to be involved here. If you raise the pink snow and it retains the color into adulthood. It would fun to see him breed to a known hypo so you can tell for sure. Isn't corn genetics fun?
 
lol, yea. One last question since we are talking about it. I have a Female striped lavender, if I breed her to a male snow, would I be able to get a snopal stripe? Would that how it works. Cause the snow is amel and anery, and then the lavender and stripe come from the female. Just wondering.
 
lol, yea. One last question since we are talking about it. I have a Female striped lavender, if I breed her to a male snow, would I be able to get a snopal stripe? Would that how it works. Cause the snow is amel and anery, and then the lavender and stripe come from the female. Just wondering.

No, if you bred those two combinations without any other recessive genes throwing a wrench into things, you would produce ALL normal "looking" offspring that would all be heterozygous for all four traits.......amel, anery, lavender and stripe. However if THOSE babies are later bred to each other when they mature, this is what the projected possibilities would be........Hold onto your hat...... :roflmao:



Male is, Het for Snow, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe
Female is, Het for Snow, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe

Offspring are predicted to be...

6.25%, Het for Snow, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe
3.13%, Het for Snow, Het for Stripe
3.13%, Het for Snow, Het for Lavender
3.13%, Het for Opal, Het for Stripe
3.13%, Het for Anery, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe
3.13%, Amelanistic, Het for Anery, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe
3.13%, Anerythristic, Het for Opal, Het for Stripe
3.13%, Striped, Het for Snow, Het for Lavender
3.13%, Lavender, Het for Snow, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Striped, Het for Snow
1.56%, Anerythristic, Het for Amel, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Anerythristic, Het for Opal
1.56%, Amelanistic, Striped, Het for Anery, Het for Lavender
1.56%, Amelanistic, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Amelanistic, Het for Anery, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Striped, Het for Opal
1.56%, Anerythristic, Striped, Het for Opal
1.56%, Snow, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Anerythristic, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Lavender, Striped, Het for Snow
1.56%, Het for Opal
1.56%, Het for Lavender, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Het for Anery, Het for Lavender
1.56%, Amelanistic, Het for Anery, Het for Lavender
1.56%, Striped, Het for Anery, Het for Lavender
1.56%, Lavender, Het for Amel, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Anerythristic, Lavender, Het for Amel, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Opal, Het for Anery, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Lavender, Het for Anery, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Het for Snow
1.56%, Lavender, Het for Snow
1.56%, Het for Anery, Het for Stripe
1.56%, Het for Amel, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Anerythristic, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Het for Amel
0.78%, Amelanistic, Het for Lavender
0.78%, Het for Anery
0.78%, Amelanistic, Striped, Het for Anery
0.78%, Anerythristic, Striped, Het for Amel
0.78%, Snow, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Amelanistic, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Anerythristic, Lavender, Striped, Het for Amel
0.78%, Amelanistic, Het for Anery
0.78%, Anerythristic, Het for Amel
0.78%, Striped, Het for Anery
0.78%, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Striped, Het for Amel
0.78%, Het for Lavender
0.78%, Snow, Striped, Het for Lavender
0.78%, Anerythristic, Lavender, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Opal, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Lavender, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Anerythristic, Lavender, Het for Amel
0.78%, Opal, Het for Anery
0.78%, Lavender, Het for Anery
0.78%, Anerythristic, Het for Lavender
0.78%, Lavender, Het for Amel
0.78%, Snow, Het for Lavender
0.78%, Anerythristic, Striped, Het for Lavender
0.78%, Lavender, Striped, Het for Amel
0.78%, Amelanistic, Striped, Het for Lavender
0.78%, Striped, Het for Lavender
0.78%, Lavender, Striped, Het for Anery
0.78%, Snow, Lavender, Het for Stripe
0.78%, Opal, Striped, Het for Anery
0.39%, Anerythristic, Lavender
0.39%, Anerythristic, Lavender, Striped
0.39%, Amelanistic
0.39%, Lavender, Striped
0.39%, Anerythristic
0.39%, Snow, Lavender
0.39%, Lavender
0.39%, Normal
0.39%, Amelanistic, Striped
0.39%, Snow, Lavender, Striped
0.39%, Snow, Striped
0.39%, Opal
0.39%, Anerythristic, Striped
0.39%, Opal, Striped
0.39%, Striped
0.39%, Snow
 
ahha, Yea after I posted that and went to bed I remembered an earlier post explaining about the offsprings, how the babies would be het, and to get what I desire I would have to breed them with each other, and that if I mated back to the parents it would only have the phenotype of that parent but het for the other. So if I breed a normal het for snow, lavender, stripe to my lavender striped female, then the offspring would potentionally show lavender and stripe and be het for snow, since my lavender stripe does not have a pair of genes to match up with the snow. Hopefully I make some sense lol. Thank you.
 
You made good sense with that. On your example the classic has a 50% chance to pass any het. So you would possibly get classics, lavenders, classic striped, lavender striped & all have a 50/50 chance to be het amel &/or anery (snow).
 
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