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It kind of looked like a anery motley to me too? But it's hard to tell their colors on the video. I want to see one come all the way out and missed it. Little turd.
The third one out totally looked like a motley. Perfect spots. Couldn't tell if it was anery or normal but I could of swore it was motley. I can't see any of them but the one with its head out. I didn't see the fourth one at all but his head looked like he was another anery.
The fourth looked like a standard anery, I didn't think a corn could be het for both motley and stripe without exhibiting it as a visible pheno since both genes are on the same loci.
That's the one I didn't get to see at all but from the head I saw it just looked like an anery. That one was the fourth one out. The third one, bottom far left, looked like a motley. I missed it hatch but saw it introduce itself to the stripe.
The third one does have some very nice round spots on the neck, but is not a motley (that would have been a nice little mystery right there ). The fourth one appears to be an anery again. I'm starting to feel like I won't be getting any tesseras from this clutch at all... 4 out so far and not a single one yet :'(
And here is the fourth one, a little anery. Where the first anery was pitch black, this one's saddles have somewhat of an silvery aspect (and it has cute pink cheeks!):
So the holy grail for this clutch would have been a Striped Tessera Snow? And since there were no tesseras that means that the female is technically only het Tessera since it only takes one copy of the gene to show as a pheno?
Jace, Tessera is dominant. A snake can't be het tessera. Well, technically, if it has one tessera gene, it _is_ het tessera, but it expresses the gene. There is only one known homo tessera snake, a "super" tessera, owned by Rich Hume.