Re: mystery of the color changers
Quote:
Originally Posted by dr del
Hi,
Wonder if it could be related in some way to lizards darkening to absorb more heat from sunlight in some whacky vestigial way?
Get too warm for too long, lighten up next shed to try and reflect more heat kind of thing. Probably not though and for god sake don't anyone cook their snakes trying to find out.:eek:
dr del
dr del, I was thinking the same exact thing once I heard the "symptoms" (you could call them that). But I used to own Bearded Dragons, and they're among one of the reptiles that change colors by brightening up or darkening depending on drastic temperature changes to maintain their inner stability.
I really feel strong that this is the case here, but I'm not sure if its' published that BPs are such reptiles that do these sorts of things. It makes perfect sense with the girl coming in one month ago and having the same change to herself.
.. Unless they microwave their food for lunchtime near the vivarium... :O
Re: mystery of the color changers
I have pics in my gallery of my male Het O ghost who did the same thing ,though not a dramatic(sp).
Re: mystery of the color changers
Re: mystery of the color changers
If their husbandry has been off as bad as you found it for a long period of time, I would guess a skin condition of some kind...like fingers getting wrinkly in he bath tub.
Re: mystery of the color changers
wow they look awesome now
Re: mystery of the color changers
i know of a fair few snakes that have had colour changes. not so drastic. its to do with the humidity i think. one of my normal fems knocked all the water out of her bowl and soaked her tub. i didn't realise till the next day, by this time the humidity was near 90. and she had gone straight into shed and came out alot lighter.
the humiidity must of been unbearable for them poor snakes :(
Re: mystery of the color changers
Quote:
Originally Posted by
jkobylka
My theory is that the high heat and humidity coupled with their shed cycle caused the animals to look as they do now.
I hope you're mistaken, and this isn't an opportunity for scammers to cook their snakes to fetch much higher prices.
Re: mystery of the color changers
If the environment was that hot and humid, it would be a huge breeding ground for bacteria. A lot of people now think that the color change from a shed is due to bacteria in the environment and once it is fixed they will return to normal during the next shed.
Re: mystery of the color changers
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Krazy99CL
thats odd....My black stp did the same thing....
The morning after I fed him his head was complete light grey(HOT!). Later on in the day it was back to normal, which is blackish grey :taz:
Maybe the balls where trying to camo themselves.. :rolleye2:
My male Mojave does this all the time. Sometimes, he is so light, that his blushing extends all the way to the ridge of his back. Other times, he looks almost jet black in lower light.
In My Opinion, it is somehow tied to temperature. I have noticed this when there have been changes in the ambient temps. Mind you, this is just a hunch.
Just also to throw another idea out there, could it be tied to food? Was there a prey item changed in their diet? Different nutrient levels could be the reasoning behind the change in appearance.
I also have noticed my 2 BCIs shift from lighter to darker and back as well.
Robin
Re: mystery of the color changers
It is an interesting question to ponder.