August 6, 2009

Update – Hypo Snow Leopard Gecko and Poss SHTCT

Posted in Leopard Geckos tagged , at 10:34 am by Sid E

This post is a followup to the Hypo Snow SHTCT Leopard Gecko post I made about 3 months ago. These juvenile leopard gecko’s are coming along nicely.  I’m still curious to see how many spot’s they end-up with. The mother of these gecko’s only laid 4 eggs this season and all four neonates are shown below.
The mother is a SHTCT and the father a Mack Snow Jungle het Tremp. I was really hoping one of these kids would turn out to be a male, but I don’t think we lucked out on that this season. Now I have to decide what to pair them with. MSSA? MSJ Het Tremp? Another morph? Let me know what you think in the comments section below.
MSHPHT #1

MSHPHT #1

SHTCTPHT #2SHTCTPHT #2
MSHPHT #3

MSHPHT #3

MSHPHA #4

MSHPHA #4

July 13, 2009

Anery Jungle Boa – Bill Kirby

Posted in Redtail Boas tagged , , at 4:53 pm by Sid E

I never would have thought the Anery Jungle Boa would have turned out so awesome. Bill Kirby just posted these babies up on Kingsnake.com. I pulled one pic for you all here, but you should check them all out by clicking here.  I would just link from the post, but kingsnake has a bad reputation full pulling great content down for absolutely no reason at all.

Anery Jungle Boa - Bill Kirby

Anery Jungle Boa - Bill Kirby

 
I believe Bill picked some awesome anery’s and jungle’s to produce these offspring, but I think a lot of it has to do with the contrast that the jungle gene naturally brings to a pattern. Bill said “using a light anery female that has no yellow coloration”. So I’m sure it has a lot to do with the excellent selective breeding Bill is known for.
Im’ not sure if this is the first time a jungle anery boa has been produced, but I would bet you won’t find a nicer one. I’m adding this morph combo to my want list.

July 9, 2009

Leopard Gecko Babies Updated Color Pics

Posted in Leopard Geckos tagged at 10:15 am by Sid E

I know I showed off these gecko babies in the last post, BUT. I just looked in the tubs last night and these two knocked my socks off. They are not cutting edge morphs, but they are real stunning to me. I can’t wait to see how they develop.

Tremper Albino Jungle Stripe Tail

Tremper Albino Jungle Stripe Tail

Mack Snow Jungle Stripe Tail het Tremper Leopard Gecko

Mack Snow Jungle Stripe Tail het Tremper Leopard Gecko

Mack Snow Jungle Face

Mack Snow Jungle Face

July 1, 2009

Jungle Leopard Gecko Babies @ SuperiorMorphs.com

Posted in Leopard Geckos tagged , at 1:47 pm by Sid E

I just had to post these two new leopard gecko babies. The sire is a Mack Snow Jungle het Tremper Albino and the dame is a Tremper Albino. (Pics below)

What I don’t know and I can’t find a clear answer to, is whether the jungle trait is polygenic or a recessive genetic trait. More on that below the pictures here, including my little case study.

Mack Snow Jungle het Tremper Albino

Mack Snow Jungle het Tremper Albino

I’m going to pair this Mack Snow Jungle het Albino leopard gecko girl with the sire and hopefully get some Super Mack Snow Jungle’s and Super Snow Tremper Albino Jungle (MSSTAJ). We would only have a 6% chance of hitting the MSSTA, but it would be really cool. We should have a 50% chance on the Super Snow Jungles though.

Tremper Albino Jungle Leopard Gecko

Tremper Albino Jungle Leopard Gecko

I didn’t mention this before, but both these girls also have a striped tail. I don’t want to shout about them much until I see if they grow out of the stripe. This girl is amazing. She is a Tremper Albino Jungle leopard gecko and she has some killer yellows to her. I can’t wait to see what she turns into.

I believe she will also be paired up with the sire to prove out the jungle stripe, striped tail and to make some killer MSJ, MSAJ, Albino jungles, and normal jungles. I would be suprised if any of the offspring are not jungle. If none of the offspring are normal pattern, then I will believe this jungle pattern to be recessive. (FYI – MSS=Mack Super Snow, MS= Mack Snow, J=Jungle, A=Albino).

Leopard Gecko Jungle Genetics

At this point I honestly don’t know whether the jungle trait in these leopard geckos is recessive or polygenic, but I believe it to be recessive and here’s why.

I have bred a this male Jungle Mack Snow het tremp to 4 different females and only one female has produced the jungle pattern. Out of the 4 eggs that hatched (from original 6) 3 were jungle. (2 dried/molded). The first two are pictured above and the other two are pictured below.

Dad MSJ het Tremp:

Mack Snow Het Tremper Albino (male)

Mack Snow Het Tremper Albino (male)

Here is the Dame Tremp Albino (breeder said poss Het RAPTOR maybe):

Tremper Albino (female) Het Jungle???

Tremper Albino (female) Het Jungle???

Here are the other two siblings

Tremper Albino Jungle

Tremper Albino Jungle

Normal Het Jungle???

Normal Het Jungle???

The odds we hit are exactly along the genetic percentages you should hit if the trait is recessive. Unfortunately it’s too small of a test group to know. Maybe I will hold on to the last normal looking one. If she is het jungle then she should produce 50% jungles and 50% het jungles that look normal. And 50% of those should be Mack Snow from dad.

If you have any other ideas about the jungle genetics or just want to make a comment, please leave one below.

June 25, 2009

Sunglow Motleybesque Boa Constrictor – Guy Scavone II

Posted in Redtail Boas tagged , at 8:58 am by Sid E

Guy Scavone II @ BoaGallery.com has had one of the coolest litters of the season. He produced the first Motleybesque sunglow. I believe the Motleybesque sunglow is a first in two categories. The first is the fact that it’s a four gene combination (Motley, Arabesque, Hypo and Albino). If this is not the case please add a comment to this post and I’ll update this. The second is the simple fact that this morph combination had not been done before now.

Sunglow Motleybesque (Credit: Guy Scavone II)

Sunglow Motleybesque (Credit: Guy Scavone II)

More great pics over on KingSnake boa forum posted by Guy himself.

I think it’s great that this combination was done, but I must admit that I don’t think I would do it, and frankly, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to me. I think the Motley and Arabesque patterns look amazing by themselves and do not get better with mixing. I’m not a purist by any means, I just think they look better by themselves.

This pairing has been done before without the sunglow factor and I thought the same thing then. Why make two incredible patterns crash into each other? It reminds me a bit of the triple het for moonglow boa (Hypo, het albino, het anery). It’s great to have for breeding/gene purposes, but the snake looks like a mutt. The Motleybesque does not look like a mutt as much as the triple het moonglow, but I still think the motley and arabesque detract from each other. This of course is only my opinion and I’m sure there are folks that would give their right pinkie to have one of these Motleybesques.

Either way you look at it, this is a killer boa morph that is sure to get a lot of attention.

What do you think of mixing the Motley and Arabesque patterns? Please let me know in the comments below.

June 11, 2009

The Scoria Boa Mystery

Posted in Redtail Boas tagged , , at 2:02 pm by Sid E

When I first thought to make a post about the Scoria Boa I thought I was exaggerating when I called it “The Scoria Boa Mystery”, but that is exactly what it is, at least to me. A mystery is “anything that is kept secret or remains unexplained or unknown”.  Someone obviously knows exactly what is going on with the Scoria Boa, but it’s not general knowledge.

We will dig into what we do know and try to take a WAG (Wild A$$ Guess) at what I think is going on. First, here is a pic of the incredible Scoria Boa (credit to Rich Isle).

Scoria Boa - Rich Isle @ SalmonBoa.com

Scoria Boa - Rich Isle @ SalmonBoa.com

The short and probably most accurate story is on the scoriaboa.com website. You could head over there and give them the credit they deserve, but then you’ll miss our version of the story. To make a short story even shorter, he purchased the male from his fish delivery driver for $75 and picked up the female from a young lady leaving for collage. These first two boas did not look like the scoria boa pictured above. Supposedly they looked like average boas.

The first 03 breeding was said to produce exotic boas, but does not specifically mention a scoria. It turns out that there was one scoria boa in the bunch and it was a male. The second breeding in 2004 produced 25 babies and only one is mentioned to have been a scoria, a female.

In 2005 the  first male scoria was bred to the matriarch, and besides about half normals, there were 2 male and 5 female scoria boas (other stories say 1.7?). That is where the scoria boa website leaves off.

The best info I have found on the scoria boa is related by Jeff Ronne (AKA the Boaphile).  You will find his story here: RedtailBoas.com Scoria Boa This Jeff Ronne not to be confused with the owner of the Scoria reffered to later as “Jeff ND”.

In 05 the first male scoria was bred to mom and produced 8 scorias. This proved the scoria genetic, but it’s not clear wether it’s dominate, codom or recessive?

After that the original owner, (Jeff ND) put some of the babies up for sale at $20,000 each! One male sold right away and then another female later on. I’m not sure if this female is the one sold to Rich Isle at salmonboa.com, but I think it is. Rumor has it that two guys both put $10K together and bought the first male for $20K. Unfortunatley the male regurged about a year later and died the next day. OUCH!! I really feel for those guys.

As far as we know, as of right now, Rich is the only person other than the original owner Jeff ND, that has a shot at making the scoria boa. As of this writing in mid-09 I have not heard of Rich producing any.

I have read rumors in other places that some het’s (or supposed het’s) were sold from the first batch. If this gene is co-dom like a motley or jungle then the supposed het’s would have no scoria gene’s at all. IF the scoria turns out to be recessive then perhaps he has a snowballs chance in Hades of producing the scoria.

The Boaphile points out that out of the first 42 babies only 2 of them were scoria. Even with bad odds you should have produced a higher number if the trait was recessive. Jeff has a theory that the scoria is a kind of dominant trait, but I’ll let him explain that here.

It’s also interesting to know that the scoria boas mentioned in this post are not the only scoria ever seen. According to Jeff … “Now nearly ten years ago, a mutant Boa was being offered for sale by Cal Zoological for a very large sum. I believe it too was for sale for $20,000. This is a picture of her below:”.

Unrelated Scoria type boa

Unrelated Scoria type boa

Russ Lockenwitz purchased this boa and unfortunately she died and never produced.

Why isnt the Scoria boa available?

This is the part where I take my WAG at why the scoria boa is not available. Jeff ND has great pics of a bunch of scorias on his site. And I believe those are from before the 07 season. My theory (JUST MY THEORY!) is that Jeff ND is holding all the scorias back so that he can sell the first litters at top price and in volume. Stay with me here….

Most new projects barely get off the ground before the people you sold the first babies to, are competing with you, and driving down the price. In 05 1.7 scoria were produced (some say 2.5). Now in the 09 season they should all be breedable age. If you take the first male and second female  born you end up with 2.8 breeding scorias.

Let’s say you get those two males to breed 4 females (not at all out of the question) and you end up with a low average litter of 18 each. That’s 72 Scoria Boas and NO competition! Let’s say you get half that 36. And you put them up for $10K, since you have multiple scoria, no respectable breeder is going to pay $20K knowing there are more. Let’s say you only sell half of them for a total of  $180,000.  If you only sell the neonates you just produced, you still have at least a full 2 years before you get any competition. In those two years you can sell at least a dozen more for $5K – $7K bringing in another $78,000. By this time many breeders will be producing them and the price will likely come down to $2,500 – $3,000. Jeff ND will likely have another 40 plus scoria by then to sell in that price range. If he sells 2 dozen more (not an exaggeration) he would bring in about another $66,000. So before the third price drop Jeff ND could conceivably bring in an estimated total of $324,000 dollars. Over a quarter of a million from a couple snakes, that cost him less than $100 bucks. Not bad.

Remember, this is just my wild guess and Jeff ND could have completely different reasons for holding back one of the most magnificent boa finds in the last 25 years. I’m certainly not judging him, if this is his plan then I will be the first to call him a genius.

Original post from original owner Jeff ND: http://www.ssnakess.com/forums/boa-constrictor/63551-pink-patternless-babys.html

Wow, that’s the longest blog post ever! At least for me. I guess that’s what happens when you try to unravel a mystery, proliferate rumors, and take a WAG all in the same post.

June 4, 2009

Paradigm Boa Constrictor Explained

Posted in Redtail Boas tagged , at 5:00 pm by Sid E

Late Latin paradīgma, from Ancient Greek ράδειγμα (paradeigma), “‘pattern’”).
1. An example serving as a model or pattern.
2. A system of assumptions, concepts, values, and practices that constitutes a way of viewing reality.

The first Paradigm Boa was produced by Mike Weitzman of basicallyboas.com, in 2004. The paradigm boa was created by breeding a “homozygous Boawoman Tyrosinase-Positive Carmel” (simple recessive gene) with a homozygous Sharp strain albino (simple recessive gene). The result was double het’s known as the Paradigm.

The paradigm boa even though it’s a double het still looks different than a typical het for sharp or het for call albino. Something seems to block the melanin (black pigment) and creates a very unique looking double het paradigm boa.

Orignial Paradigm Boa - Mike Weitzman (basicallyboas.com)

Orignial Paradigm Boa - Mike Weitzman (basicallyboas.com)

In 2005/06 Mike bred the double het paradigms to a Sharp Albino and produced 75% Sharp Albino’s and 25% Paradigms.

To get the full story from Mike himself, see how the Paradigm Boa turned out as an adult and see if Mike has any for sale visit basicallyboas.com. Be sure to read the paradigm boa #1 and paradigm boa #2 pages.

June 2, 2009

VPI T Positive Sunglow Boa Constrictor – classreptilia.com

Posted in Redtail Boas tagged , , at 3:45 pm by Sid E

Ron @ classreptilia.com may have produced the coolest boa morph for 2009. This T Positive Sunglow Boa is outstanding. Read the post here on kingsnake.com.

Here is my favorite quote from the post “It is cool to see a tub of VPI and Paradigms side by side to compare“. Man what a thrill that would be. My next post will probably explain the Paradigm Boa, so keep your eye’s peeled. (that phrase always gives me the creeps).

T+ Sunglow Boa

T+ Sunglow Boa (photo ClassReptilia.com)

The T Positive Sunglow Boa is a combination of two genes. One recessive gene (T+ Albino) and the co-dom, Hypomelenistic gene. Because boas take at least two years to reach breeding size and because the T+ albino’s are rare, even in the boa trade, this project took over 5 years to complete. That’s a lot of dedication on the part of Ron @ classreptilia.com.

May 29, 2009

Mack Snow Bell Enigma Leopard Gecko

Posted in Leopard Geckos tagged at 6:15 pm by Sid E

Steve Raffaele @ Western Gecko hatched out this killer looking leopard gecko in mid-May of 2009. I wanted to post this little guy up because it looks so unique. I’ll get more information on the parents and update this post as Steve posts juvenile and adult pics. If you want to see more of Steve’s stock, check out Western Gecko (Canada). (Parents added below)

Mack Snow Bell Enigma

Mack Snow Bell Enigma

Mack Snow Bell Enigma

Mack Snow Bell Enigma

Mack Snow Bell Enigma
Mack Snow Bell Enigma

Steve was nice enough to send along pictures of the pair that created this cool gecko.

Sire:

mack snow enigma het bell

mack snow enigma het bell

Dame:
Bell Albino

Bell Albino

May 28, 2009

Baby Leopard Geckos 2009

Posted in Leopard Geckos tagged , at 10:04 pm by Sid E

Just wanted to give a quick superiormorphs.com leopard gecko update. We may have some boas later on in the season, or we may have to look forward to the coming season.

Meanwhile, here are a few baby leopard gecko’s that we are real happy with this season. Shoot us an email if you are interested in any of them or check superiormorphs.com and see if we’ve put them up yet. We are just waiting until we are 100% sure of their sex.

Mack Snow Hypo Leopard Gecko (one of my favorites)

Mack Snow Hypo

Mack Snow Hypo

Jungle Carrot Tail Leopard Gecko (striped tail?)

Jungle Leopard Gecko

Jungle Leopard Gecko

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