Need help with breeding ball pythons
Alright so I finally got my 100% het for cinnamon male ball python which I plan to breed with my normal girl who has super nice patterns wondering first what types of babies am I going to get and also how much can I sell some baby cinnamons i already have a rack coming from boaphile plastics which have flexwatt heat tape but was wondering can I keep my male in a 40 gallon and then keep my female in her custom made 5x2x2 cage I am asking because if my female grows bigger than my male then would my female fight my male or possibly eat him or should I keep each of them in a 40 gallon tank
Re: Need help with breeding ball pythons
Quote:
Originally Posted by
travis11
Het for Cinnamon?? You must mean Cinnamon, Recessive Genes are Hets. Cinnamon is a Co-Dominate Gene. Also, if you are a first time Breeder, which it sounds like you are, i would defly stay away from Hets and just focus on Base Morphs. Its up to you though.
Wouldn't a normal cinnamon be heterozygous while a super cinnamon is homozygous? I think the het stamp is mostly reserved for simple recessive genes(where hets aren't visual) just to keep things as simple as possible since in codominate the heterozygous and homozygous forms are visual. Which makes me wonder, would a spider be heterozygous or homozygous or something else? I have no idea how it works with dominate genes.
Re: Need help with breeding ball pythons
Quote:
Originally Posted by
John1982
Wouldn't a normal cinnamon be heterozygous while a super cinnamon is homozygous? I think the het stamp is mostly reserved for simple recessive genes(where hets aren't visual) just to keep things as simple as possible since in codominate the heterozygous and homozygous forms are visual. Which makes me wonder, would a spider be heterozygous or homozygous or something else? I have no idea how it works with dominate genes.
With dominate genes there is no visual difference between the heterozygous and homozygous animal.
The only way to tell is to breed them, a heterozygous dominate will result in 50% offspring with the dominate trait. The homozygous snake will pass on the dominate trait 100% of the time.