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Thread: New Boa!

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  1. #10
    BPnet Veteran bioteacher's Avatar
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    She probably has 75% of her genetics (bloodline) from the hogg island boa species and 25% of her genetics from the columbian red tail species. A lot of breeders interbreed species to produce certain traits. Think carpondros (a carpet python crossed with a green tree python) - in this case it would be 50% carpet python genetics 50% green tree python genetics. The same thing has been done to produce your boa - only one parent was probably a pure hogg island boa 100% and the other was a 50% hogg 50% red tail boa.

    By saying that she is het for sunglow... the breeder is saying that it is hypomelanistic and that it is het for albino. Sunglow is a combination of hypo and albino. Hypo is a codominant trait though, so your boa would express the hypo gene - which it seems to be doing. Albino is a recessive trait - you need two recessive alleles (think back to punnet squares from school...haha) to express the trait. The salmon is just a color variation of red tails. So if it was sold to you as a hypo/salmon het for sunglow, then it should technically be salmon (just a color trait), have the hypo gene, and be het for albino. I don't know enough about hogg island and red tail boas to tell you if your boa is a salmon AND is hypo. I also don't know if you can produce a sunglow from a salmon albino that isn't hypo or if "salmon" and "hypo" are considered the same thing.

    If I'm not mistaken, sunglow was first a red tail trait that had been bred into hogg island boas... I think.

    If you took her and bred her to a 100% pure red tail boa, then all your offspring would be 37.5% hogg blood and 62.5% red tail blood - remember half of the genetics from each parent (your boa --> 1/2 of 75% hogg is 37.5% + 1/2 of 25% red tail is 12.5% + theoretical pure red tail --> 1/2 of 100% red tail is 50%... add it all and you get: 37.5% hogg and 62.5% red tail). Breeding her to a het albino would produce albinos, het albinos, salmon sunglows (?), hypos het albino, hypos, salmons, salmon hypos, salmon hypos het albino (which yours supposedly is), and sunglows - probably missed something there. Punnett squares are the easiest way to look at it as long as you know the genetics of the two being crossed and which are dominant and recessive traits.

    As for a boa and ball interacting... there shouldn't be a problem holding them both - it may cause them some stress though as they don't hang out together in nature. Definitely don't keep them in the same tank and if you do hold both and one displays being stressed or hostility, then only hold one. I have held several snakes at once from different species, but only for a short amount of time for a photo or to show someone/my students phenotypic differences between species.

    I hope all this rambling didn't confuse you more!
    Last edited by bioteacher; 01-21-2012 at 10:53 PM.
    ~Chris
    Biology Departments - Marist College & Mount Saint Mary College
    carillephoto.com - Wildlife, Landscape, Wedding, & (of course) Snake Photography for sale
    edenexotics.weebly.com - my snake breeding business. Lots of different species, from Ball Pythons through to Bimini Island Boas

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