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morph VS. temperament
has anyone noticed a difference in attitude in the different morphs?
my pastel likes to hiss, my normal does nothing, she loves poeple.
A room full of empty racks and thermostats that have been unplugged.
*Chris*
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Registered User
Re: morph VS. temperament
Bhb did a video of snakebytes on it. Definately a good watch.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Jeremy78 For This Useful Post:
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Re: morph VS. temperament
ill do a search and check it out
A room full of empty racks and thermostats that have been unplugged.
*Chris*
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BPnet Veteran
Re: morph VS. temperament
My pastel is a hisser too.
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BPnet Veteran
Re: morph VS. temperament
In my opinion they are all individuals and their paint job has nothing to do with temperament.
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The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to jason79 For This Useful Post:
Coleslaw007 (12-06-2012),mpkeelee (06-10-2010),snakesRkewl (12-06-2012),stratus_020202 (06-11-2010)
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Re: morph VS. temperament
i know they all have different personalities, but i didnt know if one morph had genes that would make it more prone to being pissy or something.
A room full of empty racks and thermostats that have been unplugged.
*Chris*
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Re: morph VS. temperament
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Re: morph VS. temperament
Think about this:
1) Consider that temperment is at least partly genetic
2) most morphs originate from a single imported original animal
3) 1 and 2 imply that for any particular morph, all animals of that morph should have at least some resemblance in temperment to the original ancestor, and therefore to each other. This is especially true since we see plenty of line breeding and a lack of outcrossing for many morphs.
The cinnamon trait may not cause a bad temperment, but all cinnamons may have a genetic tendency towards bad temperment, all being directly related to an original cinnamon with a genetic tendency towards bad temperment (lets assume that there aren't multiple lines of cinnamons from multiple imports)
Last edited by mainbutter; 06-11-2010 at 12:18 AM.
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to mainbutter For This Useful Post:
Macropodus (11-04-2016),mpkeelee (06-11-2010)
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Re: morph VS. temperament
If true, then the bad temperament can be easily bred out in a few generations, as long as folks try.
I have a cinnie with a good temperament.
His 'white snake' rule doesn't stand up, anyhow. I have produced both very sweet-tempered and very nasty albinos.
I have produced extremely docile and extremely snappy pastels, too.
The truth is, may people ignore temperament entirely in their breeding programs, and focus only on the paint jobs.
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Re: morph VS. temperament
All of my snakes are gentle tempered. There are so many other factors to figure in too. My two new hatchlings are snippy (becuase they think they need to eat every day!), and my little black pastel wasn't handled much, so he was snippy when I first got him, but he's calmed down a lot.
My normal was my only pet store bought snake, and he is jumpy, but never hisses or strikes (knock on wood). Everyone else, just doesn't care. They just want to sleep, or eat.
"Be not afraid of greatness: some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon them." ~William Shakespeare
1.1 Normals - Apollo & Medusa
1.0 Pastel - Zeke
0.1 Pastel het OG - Dixie
0.1 Pastel het Axanthic
0.1 Spider het Axanthic
1.1 Mojave - Clyde & Bonnie
1.0 Black Pastel - Conan
0.1 Spider - Dizzy
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