• Hello!

    Either you have not registered on this site yet, or you are registered but have not logged in. In either case, you will not be able to use the full functionality of this site until you have registered, and then logged in after your registration has been approved.

    Registration is FREE, so please register so you can participate instead of remaining a lurker....

    Please be certain that the location field is correctly filled out when you register. All registrations that appear to be bogus will be rejected. Which means that if your location field does NOT match the actual location of your registration IP address, then your registration will be rejected.

    Sorry about the strictness of this requirement, but it is necessary to block spammers and scammers at the door as much as possible.

what would the babies be!

nbcorns

New member
if a person had classic male het cinder het hypo het caramel het amel and you bred it back to the same what would a guy get
 
if a person had classic male het cinder het hypo het caramel het amel and you bred it back to the same what would a guy get

normally two males do not produce viable offspring, but good luck, there's always a first.

if you were to bred your male to a female with the same hets in those genes you would potentially get:

  • Normal
  • Caramel
  • Cinder
  • Amel
  • Hypo
  • Caramel, Cinder
  • Butter
  • Amber
  • Amel Cinder (Peppermin)
  • Hypo Amel
  • Hypo Cinder
  • Hypo Butter
  • Butter, Cinder
  • Amber, Cinder
  • Hypo Amel Cinder
  • Hypo Cinder Butter
 
I'd say yes to ghost motley, maybe to Miami but it looks like it could be any wild type. I'm not great at the localities. If your normal/Miami has no hets, you'd get all normals.
 
Tobasco, your normal looks a lot like mine But she's not a Miami Locality, I'm not sure what that is other than a classic/wild type. If your two snakes bred, you would get all 'normal/ classic' babies, UNLESS (like Rigby & Marcy said) She/he had hets that are compatible with genes the Ghost has.

Ghost Motley is a combination of three genes, Anerythristic, Hypo, and Motley, Anery prevents the red pigments from showing, Hypo lightens the color, and Motley changes the pattern.. If your Ghost has other Het (hidden= one copy of the gene) There is a 50/50 chance for each of those hidden genes to be passed on as well.

All your babies would look like normals, but be HET (carry one copy of the genes - you need two for recessives to show ) for Anerythristic, Hypo, and Motley. Plus there might also be other Het (hidden) genes that are hiding in the parent snakes but don't show. If both parents have the same hidden gene, you might get a few babies showing that gene.

If your normal were captive bred (most likely) It is possible that he/she is het for something, but there is no way to tell what. Most corn snake color and pattern genes are recessive, So two are needed for that color or pattern to show.

Now let's have a little bit of fun: Your snakes make snakey love and produce eggs, Which you then incubate and hatch out adorable baby snakes - most likely normals - unless the classic has het genes (hidden) that match genes that your Ghost has.
You now have a Bunch of adorable babies that you will post pictures of here for us to coo over (grin).
You Keep a few boys and girls for yourself, and find homes for all the others.
After about three years, your girl/s are big enough and you breed them then incubate the eggs.

<<<<<<<And when they HATCH>>>>>>>>>>

You'll get some normal/classic looking snakes, And also some babies that will be one of these types:
Anery,
Anery Motley,
Ghost,
Ghost Motley,
Hypo,
Hypo Motley,
Motley (normal colors)
Plus some other possible colors or patterns if there are other het genes.

Some of the babies will be het for the other genes the parents have, but there's no way to know which ones.

Fun, right? (grin)
I have a lot of fun playing with the genetics calculator.
Keep in mind That this is a bit of a long term plan.
Right now your scids (Scale kids) still need time to grow a little bigger before any of this could happen. So you would be looking at your first babies in probably a year or two minimum And then another three years for their babies to be big enough to breed safely.

Nancy
(laughs at the 'post quick reply button and presses it)
 
:nyah:
picture.php
My first baby is pipping...
 
Back
Top