Vote for BP.Net for the 2013 Forum of the Year! Click here for more info.

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 542

2 members and 540 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,912
Threads: 249,117
Posts: 2,572,189
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, coda

Number of Morphs

Printable View

  • 02-29-2012, 11:10 PM
    fortozs
    I am total agreement with the OP's point. It is confusing to list all these morphs as different morphs if they are not. There are too many to keep up with as it is. I would like to see a list of all major base morphs with "complexes" listed and all "morphs" that belong to that "complex" listed. For example for co-dominant morphs:

    Black Pastel-Cinnamon Complex - Black Pastels, Cinnamons (would mahoganies fit this?)

    Pastel complex - pastel, lemon pastel, jungle pastel, citrus pastel

    blue-eyed lucy complex - mojave, lesser, butter, honey

    mystic-phantom complex - mystic-phantom

    I'm not trying to debate whether morph a = morph b of the same complex. That's not the point. But it would definitely help organize things.
  • 03-01-2012, 02:59 AM
    paulh
    Re: Number of Morphs
    Has anyone crossed a black pastel with a cinny to get both genes in one snake? Mating such a snake with a normal would tell us whether the two genes are compatible. If they are not compatible, they cannot be the same gene. They may not be the same gene even if compatible, but that is harder to test.
  • 03-01-2012, 03:13 AM
    jsmorphs2
    Re: Number of Morphs
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paulh View Post
    Has anyone crossed a black pastel with a cinny to get both genes in one snake? Mating such a snake with a normal would tell us whether the two genes are compatible. If they are not compatible, they cannot be the same gene. They may not be the same gene even if compatible, but that is harder to test.

    Yes, they are compatible and produce an all black/brown snake. But it's a similar situation to a Mojave x Lesser BEL. They are two different genes in the same complex.
  • 03-01-2012, 06:48 AM
    OhhWatALoser
    Re: Number of Morphs
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by fortozs View Post
    I am total agreement with the OP's point. It is confusing to list all these morphs as different morphs if they are not. There are too many to keep up with as it is. I would like to see a list of all major base morphs with "complexes" listed and all "morphs" that belong to that "complex" listed. For example for co-dominant morphs:

    Black Pastel-Cinnamon Complex - Black Pastels, Cinnamons (would mahoganies fit this?)

    Pastel complex - pastel, lemon pastel, jungle pastel, citrus pastel

    blue-eyed lucy complex - mojave, lesser, butter, honey

    mystic-phantom complex - mystic-phantom

    I'm not trying to debate whether morph a = morph b of the same complex. That's not the point. But it would definitely help organize things.

    http://www.owalreptiles.com/complexes.php

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by paulh View Post
    Has anyone crossed a black pastel with a cinny to get both genes in one snake? Mating such a snake with a normal would tell us whether the two genes are compatible. If they are not compatible, they cannot be the same gene. They may not be the same gene even if compatible, but that is harder to test.

    it is called an 8-ball
  • 03-01-2012, 03:05 PM
    fortozs
    Re: Number of Morphs
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by OhhWatALoser View Post

    Thank you so much. That is exactly what I was looking for.
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1