I guess you guys haven't visited my site since I updated the cultivar pages. Shame on you all!
I've put in more photos and some code so you can select photos from a group of thumbnails right on the page. It is amazingly efficient code (provided by Danni Wilson), and I thought you all would be impressed.
Anyway, take a look at the
Silver Queen Page . There are about a half dozen photos there of some different Silver Queens which are a subset of my breeding stock. As you will see, some have traces of yellow and some do not. Note that the text says that '
some completely lack yellow', and this is plainly evident in the photos.
Yellow is still a wildcard in the corn snakes. If have lots of examples of both xanthic and apparently axanthic animals, but cannot come up with any rhyme nor reason about what is going on with them. Is one or the other a true genetic trait? If so is it recessive, dominant, or co-dominant? Does something else have to be in the genetic mix in order to influence whether it is evident or not?
So far the current leading theory I have is that ONLY animals that pip when the second hand of my clock on the wall is between 10 and 12 will be axanthic animals when they reach maturity. Unfortunately I cannot prove it because I am never around to catch exactly when a snake pips the egg. But it is just as logical as everything else I have seen with this color showing up.
