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  1. #11
    BPnet Senior Member Brandon Osborne's Avatar
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    Re: Number of Morphs

    Quote Originally Posted by snake lab View Post
    When working with different lines of the same morph such as pastels for example, it comes down to variants of the offspring. A sterling made from bell line pastel or a sterling made from a lemon may look different be would be variants of the same morph therefore it have to be named as such. If a cinnamon and a black both came from the same wild caught animal then it would be that way throughout the breedings and its not. Both different morphs. Now blacks i think have more variants then cinnies. The blackest super forms of the black pastel comes from outbacks line imo. Those things are jet black
    The first part of this I agree with. Bloodlines....same thing, different bloodlines. Again it's all about who can pee the farthest. Different locales of ball have different patterns and coloration. This will make the same morph appear differently from one example to the next. I don't buy the cinny/BP argument and never will. How can black be blacker than black? Same snakes...different lines. Calico...sugar...sprinkle....white-sided....blah blah blah. Mine is bigger than yours mentality. If you have something TRULY different then great. If not, don't try to make things more difficult.

    Snakelab, this is not directed at you personally. Just my general thoughts and opinion on the subject. Folks will believe what they want and it will never be solved.
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  2. #12
    BPnet Royalty OhhWatALoser's Avatar
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    Re: Number of Morphs

    Quote Originally Posted by Brandon Osborne View Post
    . I don't buy the cinny/BP argument and never will. How can black be blacker than black?
    when black is blacker than brown I've seen a few pictures of adult super black pastel that were still black. Every adult super cinny i've seen is brown.

    As for candy toffee, breed a candy to a toffee or albino, see what pops out, then you will know.

  3. #13
    BPnet Veteran RobNJ's Avatar
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    Re: Number of Morphs

    Quote Originally Posted by OhhWatALoser View Post
    when black is blacker than brown I've seen a few pictures of adult super black pastel that were still black. Every adult super cinny i've seen is brown.

    As for candy toffee, breed a candy to a toffee or albino, see what pops out, then you will know.

    There are also browned out super black pastels and very black super cinnies.

    As for candy/toffee(same thing) being compatible with albino, doesn't mean they're the same.
    Last edited by RobNJ; 02-29-2012 at 05:54 PM.

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  5. #14
    BPnet Royalty OhhWatALoser's Avatar
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    Re: Number of Morphs

    Quote Originally Posted by RobNJ View Post
    There are also browned out super black pastels and very black super cinnies.

    As for candy/toffee(same thing) being compatible with albino, doesn't mean they're the same.
    i have yet to see a black super cinny adult.

    As for candy/toffee, if they look the same and act the same genetically, what is left to say they are different?

  6. #15
    BPnet Senior Member WingedWolfPsion's Avatar
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    Here's how it actually happens:

    Person A imports a wild caught new morph, proves it genetic, and names it.
    Person B imports a wild caught animal that looks similar to the new morph. He proves it genetic, and names it.
    Now Person A or Person B have to acquire one of each other's animals, and cross them, because until you do that, you can't be SURE they are the same.

    If you assume that they are, you are a bit too likely to be wrong! Here are some examples:

    Woma versus Hidden Gene Woma. HG Womas, mistaken for Womas at first, were originally believed to be carrying an extra gene that influenced their appearance and showed up in combos. It wasn't so. They weren't actually womas at all, but were a separate co-dominant morph.

    Desert Ghost Versus Desert. Another morph mistaken for the other originally, and later proved to be completely different genes.

    Yellowbelly Versus Het Highway--can you tell them apart? Most people couldn't, but what popped out wasn't an Ivory, it was a Highway.

    In some cases, snakes have been proven to be the same morph, which is the reason why you will see them listed with two names. Banana and Whitesmoke are the same morph. Which name you use, well, that's up to you, but in general, the one with seniority will be the winner.

    An example of morphs widely believed to be the same, but not yet confirmed--Ultramel and Crider.

    Now, butters may be lessers. The problem with the lesser/mojave/russo complex is that these animals all produce white snakes when combined, and only the mojave x mojave really shows significant differences. We can't tell whether Butter and Lesser are the same gene by looking at their super forms, because the fact that they are identical doesn't prove anything. Super Russos don't really look any different either, but are clearly a different gene. So, butter and lesser are ambiguous.

    Now, cinnamons and black pastels aren't the same--they look similar, but not identical, their super forms are different, and they act slightly differently in combos.

    The different variations of the pastel jungle have been produced through selective breeding.. The morph is pastel, the variations are selectively bred--there should be no real confusion there. If you cross a selectively bred animal with one that hasn't been, you will dilute those characteristics.
    That's why you see so many 'lemon pastels' that simply aren't. Just because you started with a lemon pastel, doesn't mean that's what you have 3 generations later. The pastel gene remains immutable, but the line-bred traits won't last if the selective breeding isn't meticulously continued.

    So, no, they aren't doing it to size each other up, or to annoy...there are real issues that need to be resolved, to determine what individual ball python morphs are, what they should be called, and how many there are.
    --Donna Fernstrom
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  7. #16
    Registered User snake lab's Avatar
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    Black pastels and cinnies both look different. The supers look different. Therefore different gene. Also black to pastel produces a different combo then cinny to pastel does. Again different gene. Theres no way to argue that. We arent talking about different lines. We are talking different gene
    [IMG][/IMG]

  8. #17
    BPnet Veteran RobNJ's Avatar
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    Re: Number of Morphs

    Quote Originally Posted by OhhWatALoser View Post
    As for candy/toffee, if they look the same and act the same genetically, what is left to say they are different?
    Of course candy and toffee are the same....

    Quote Originally Posted by OhhWatALoser View Post
    As for candy toffee, breed a candy to a toffee or albino, see what pops out, then you will know.
    By this post, it sounded as if you were saying they are the same as albino.

  9. #18
    Single Serving Friend jsmorphs2's Avatar
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    I agree there is a lot of diversity within each morph but I also agree Cinnys and Black Pastels are two different genes. I also think that it can be hard to tell the difference when looking at poor examples of each morph. And some are just miss-labeled.

    I bet everyone can see the difference between good examples of each morph.

    ~Jessica~

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  11. #19
    BPnet Senior Member WingedWolfPsion's Avatar
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    Re: Number of Morphs

    Quote Originally Posted by RobNJ View Post
    Of course candy and toffee are the same....



    By this post, it sounded as if you were saying they are the same as albino.
    No, Toffee is allelic with albino. Toffinos look essentially the same as toffees.
    --Donna Fernstrom
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    OhhWatALoser (02-29-2012)

  13. #20
    BPnet Royalty OhhWatALoser's Avatar
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    Re: Number of Morphs

    couple things i disagree with

    Quote Originally Posted by WingedWolfPsion View Post
    We can't tell whether Butter and Lesser are the same gene by looking at their super forms, because the fact that they are identical doesn't prove anything.
    again as i said above, if they look the same and act the same, what else do we have to argue their different?

    Quote Originally Posted by WingedWolfPsion View Post
    Super Russos don't really look any different either, but are clearly a different gene. So, butter and lesser are ambiguous.
    I havn't seen a super russo in real life without a very yellow stripe going down it's back, they look closer to ivorys with blue eyes. Yes i have seen some pictures online of white super russos, but the super form is clearly different from butter/lesser.

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