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  1. #11
    Steel Magnolia rabernet's Avatar
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    Re: The Prevalence of Duckbill and Popularity of Cinnamon

    Quote Originally Posted by Pythonfriend View Post
    wait, and this really is a cinnamon you are talking about? the normal heterozygous version, with pattern, just a lot darker than a normal? not a patternless dark brown homozygous super cinnamon? i just need to make sure we are not confusing cinnamon and super cinnamon here.

    if a cinnamon has these issues, its time to run and never look back. cinnamon should have none of these issues, absolutely nothing, no kink no duckbill. for super cinnamon i would say kinks are unacceptable, but a slight duckbill is acceptable. but for a regular cinnamon any of these issues is highly unusual, and unacceptable, i mean, this is almost as unusual as a pastel with duckbill and a slight kink would be.
    This is incorrect. Black pastels and cinnamons (not supers) can also have duck billing and kinking.

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  3. #12
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    Re: The Prevalence of Duckbill and Popularity of Cinnamon

    Quote Originally Posted by rabernet View Post
    This is incorrect. Black pastels and cinnamons (not supers) can also have duck billing and kinking.
    really?

    but it got to be very rare compared to the supers. also the pewters / black pewters / cinnamons / black pastels ive seen so far didnt have it. and how are you supposed to get supers without kinking and without duckbills, when even the single gene versions show it?

    if not even the single-gene versions can be selectively bred for perfect health, that really casts doubt on both genes. i could be wrong, and then i would be shocked because im quite sure about it, but i really believe most lines are clean enough so that you dont get these issues in combos that only contain one copy. and some lines seem to even be clean enough to produce supers that are free of issues.

    surely if you start with, lets say, a super black pastel that shows no issues at all, from parents that also show no issues at all, you will get offspring that also shows no issues. or am i wrong and even in this case, in offspring that contains only one copy, the issues still randomly pop up?

    should the single-gene morphs be added to the list of morphs with inherent genetic problems? should all people that do not want to deal with any genetic issues remove these genes from their collections, even if the examples they have so far are flawless? i have a hard time believing that its as bad as you make it sound.
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  4. #13
    BPnet Royalty OhhWatALoser's Avatar
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    Re: The Prevalence of Duckbill and Popularity of Cinnamon

    This is the first time I have heard of this also, interesting. Besides super black pastels and super cinnys the only duck bills I have seen are on normals. About the only thing I would add to the single gene cinny/black pastels is they seem to show ringers more often than other morphs. Any other claims to this?

    Quote Originally Posted by Pythonfriend View Post
    surely if you start with, lets say, a super black pastel that shows no issues at all, from parents that also show no issues at all, you will get offspring that also shows no issues. or am i wrong and even in this case, in offspring that contains only one copy, the issues still randomly pop up?

    should the single-gene morphs be added to the list of morphs with inherent genetic problems? should all people that do not want to deal with any genetic issues remove these genes from their collections, even if the examples they have so far are flawless? i have a hard time believing that its as bad as you make it sound.
    But I can answer, Duck billing might be a polygenetic trait and black pastel/cinny is just one of the main parts to make it show, but the normal allele resists it pretty well or it might have something to do with epigenetics. Both would suggest that breeding animals without problems would tend to have babies without problems, but depending on how the trait works, one wrong event could make the unwanted trait show up. Chances are it is not random but complex in some way. I mean hundreds of people have zero issues, but satomi325's friend hatched a few from the same stock of animals (im assuming), so I think they just unknowingly had the conditions to make it happen in their stock, whatever that might be.

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  6. #14
    BPnet Lifer coldbloodaddict's Avatar
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    Re: The Prevalence of Duckbill and Popularity of Cinnamon

    I have produced 100's of Black Pastels and Black Pastel combos since 2004 and none had any Duck Billing or Kinking.

    I have made 1 Ian G. Line Super Black Pastel...It had horrible face deformities and was kinked in several places.
    Last edited by coldbloodaddict; 03-04-2014 at 07:36 PM.

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  8. #15
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    Re: The Prevalence of Duckbill and Popularity of Cinnamon

    Quote Originally Posted by coldbloodaddict View Post
    I have produced 100's of Black Pastels and Black Pastel combos since 2004 and none had any Duck Billing or Kinking.

    I have made 1 Ian G. Line Super Black Pastel...It had horrible face deformities and was kinked in several places.
    now that is interesting. i mean, two weeks ago it would not have been that interesting for me, because i assumed that only the supers show the issues. but now, when im a bit confused and people challenge the idea that single-genes or combos containing only one copy are fine, its suddenly very interesting.

    its unfortunate that to settle such issues, we cannot just reference a scientific research paper published in a well-established peer reviewed journal. i mean, one actual scientific research paper that got published was discussed here, and suddenly everyone agrees that BPs cannot see red light. and that their eyes are most sensitive to green, blue, violet, and ultraviolet.

    it would be better if some billionaire BP keeper would give a few millions to do actual research. but thats not the case. so we have to share and evaluate experiences and personal evaluations, and have to somehow make sense of these.

    i change my opinion. it used to be: "BPs containing only one copy of black pastel or cinnamon DO NOT show kinking or duckbill".
    i now believe: "BPs containing only one copy of black pastel or cinnamon GENERALLY DO NOT, AND SHOULD NOT show kinking or duckbill".

    i will continue to question that belief. i will continue to actively search for answers, and revisit and if necessary revise my beliefs as new data comes in.
    The Big Bang almost certainly (beyond reasonable doubt) happened 13.7 billion years ago. If you disagree, send me a PM.
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    One third of the global economy relies on technology that is based on quantum mechanics, especially quantum electrodynamics (electron-photon or electron-electron interactions). If you disagree, send me a PM.
    Time Dilation is real, it is so real that all clocks if they are precise enough can measure it, and GPS could not possibly work without it.
    If you disagree, send me a PM.

    The 4 philosophically most important aspects of modern science are: Evolutionary theory, Cosmology, Quantum mechanics, and Einsteins theory of general relativity. Understand these to get a grip of reality.

    my favorite music video is online again, its really nice: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oABEGc8Dus0


  9. #16
    BPnet Senior Member Archimedes's Avatar
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    Re: The Prevalence of Duckbill and Popularity of Cinnamon

    so the current very (and I mean very) general consensus is that these defects can occur occasionally in family lines, and that good lines of single gene animals can lead to other single gene animals of equal quality. however it may happen regardless of lines involved once it is applied to supers of the respective genes. I'm glad I began this discussion because Cinnamons and Black Pastels aren't actively discussed the way other morphs are, and clearly there is more to learn about the gene.

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  10. #17
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    While I think selective breeding and paying attention to lines is a great first practice I think there may be some cases where environment also plays a big part.

    Spinning in spiders and kinking (and perhaps even female fertility) in caramels might be issues that are inherent tendencies of the mutation that can not be breed out. However, particularly with the caramel kinking I have reports from respected breeders I trust of long stretches of no kink babies that would be astronomically unlikely based on the kink rates reported by other breeders. If it was just selective breeding I would expect the customers of these breeders to report the same good results and we would have known non kinking caramel lines. Perhaps why I've not seen new reports of kinkless caramel lines is that something else, perhaps even accidental, in the feeding or environment is compensating for the caramels kinking tendency in some collections. One theory I had was some nutrient either not tolerated or needed in higher rates by the caramel mutation.

    Anyway, back to cinnamon/black pastel. What if a tendency to duck bill and kink are just part of the mutation just like the color and pattern we like. Two copies of the gene make these weaker traits more likely to show but there is also the possibility for an environmental factor to help suppress the tendency. Maybe incubating at one end or the other of the normal temperature range can increase your chances of producing a perfect super and the other extreme a duckbilled kinked regular (heterozygous) cinnamon/black pastel? I'm not saying the breeder who produced the duck billed black pastels or anyone who produced kinked caramels is not keeping their animals perfectly fine as far as excepted practices for ball pythons in general, it just might be that these mutations might need something a little different.
    Last edited by RandyRemington; 03-09-2014 at 11:58 AM.

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  12. #18
    BPnet Senior Member Archimedes's Avatar
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    Re: The Prevalence of Duckbill and Popularity of Cinnamon

    Quote Originally Posted by RandyRemington View Post
    While I think selective breeding and paying attention to lines is a great first practice I think there may be some cases where environment also plays a big part.

    Spinning in spiders and kinking (and perhaps even female fertility) in caramels might be issues that are inherent tendencies of the mutation that can not be breed out. However, particularly with the caramel kinking I have reports from respected breeders I trust of long stretches of no kink babies that would be astronomically unlikely based on the kink rates reported by other breeders. If it was just selective breeding I would expect the customers of these breeders to report the same good results and we would have known non kinking caramel lines. Perhaps why I've not seen new reports of kinkless caramel lines is that something else, perhaps even accidental, in the feeding or environment is compensating for the caramels kinking tendency in some collections. One theory I had was some nutrient either not tolerated or needed in higher rates by the caramel mutation.

    Anyway, back to cinnamon/black pastel. What if a tendency to duck bill and kink are just part of the mutation just like the color and pattern we like. Two copies of the gene make these weaker traits more likely to show but there is also the possibility for an environmental factor to help suppress the tendency. Maybe incubating at one end or the other of the normal temperature range can increase your chances of producing a perfect super and the other extreme a duckbilled kinked regular (heterozygous) cinnamon/black pastel? I'm not saying the breeder who produced the duck billed black pastels or anyone who produced kinked caramels is not keeping their animals perfectly fine as far as excepted practices for ball pythons in general, it just might be that these mutations might need something a little different.
    this is a great point. I would love to see a study done on two clutches from a reliable cinny or black pastel line with temps as the only difference in incubation practice. I think it could yield interesting results and provide keepers with a reliable control for working with the genes.

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  13. #19
    They call me Emilius LOL Emilio's Avatar
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    Re: The Prevalence of Duckbill and Popularity of Cinnamon



    This is a Black Pastel Cinny I produced last season, I got lucky her face looks good but she does have a tiny kink at the tip of her tail.

    I absolutely love her look and didn't mind the risk of deformities to produce her. In some cases you gotta take the good with the bad.


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  14. #20
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    How about multi gene supers? I have only one black pastel in my collection and its a super black with either spider or pastel or both mixed in with her and she has no kinking or duck billing at all.
    Any chance of extra genes thrown in to the mix reducing the chance of kings and duck bills?

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