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Welcome to our newest member, Boons
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Banned
Anyone know of some definite temperature related morphs? I've heard of em in burms, and boas, but none for bp's that I recall.
For those of you who don't know, you can often produce a morph by using different temperatures to cause mutations.
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BPnet Veteran
2 Hides and some feeding pics
I have a BP book by...umm... I can't think of it... anyway it was a really thin book. One of the pictures was a striped BP produced by the author by fluctuating temperatures. Now I'm gonna have to go find that book, lol.
-Lindsay
0.1 ball python - 1.1 leopard geckos
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Banned
Lemme know if you can, that'll be an interesting read.
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BPnet Veteran
I have heard the same, that fluctuating temps can cause a stripe on the back. That's the only one I've heard of, though.
Randy
"I think it might be helpful for everyone to remember that the purpose of a forum like this is to EXCHANGE IDEAS, not dictate what is right or wrong or good or bad. If you disagree with what someone else is suggesting, you can say so without being argumentative or completely slamming the guy (or girl)." - Smynx
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Registered User
So wouldnt it be funny to have someone think theyve finally isolated a genetic stripe when actually its the incubation temps that they use made the stripe.
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BPnet Veteran
I remember hearing somewhere that they produce stripes on their backs when they get stressed out in the egg. So if you have a "normal" BP and it has a stripe all the way down its back, or even half way down, it was stressed. :-\ Who knows.... It makes sense to me.
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Banned
I got some good partial stripping,
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