Re: Looking for blood ball (super ball) and or carpet ball (carball)
Originally Posted by catzeye21138
If I were to ever breed a breitensteini/regius I would get them microchipped and make any person wanting to purchase one sign a contract promising:
not to breed them and
if they were ever unable to care for the animal or wanted to sell it, that it would be returned to me.
That being said I'd assume other breeders have similar, maybe not so strict guidelines about it.
I would have to agree. I'm not sure where I stand on the morality of it in general but I don't think these gene pools need to be mixed together. It could snowball.
Re: Looking for blood ball (super ball) and or carpet ball (carball)
Honestly plays the roll in that part. Me as a breeder I would never sell something that isn't 100% what I said it is. If i sell a super ball that person will know that and if they sell it as a ball python well its their fault for doing that in my opinion
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Re: Looking for blood ball (super ball) and or carpet ball (carball)
Originally Posted by bradthebanker
Honestly plays the roll in that part. Me as a breeder I would never sell something that isn't 100% what I said it is. If i sell a super ball that person will know that and if they sell it as a ball python well its their fault for doing that in my opinion
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I don't know that it's so much the issue of selling it as the wrong animal as it is mixing up the gene pool. If they weren't tracked you could end up with ball that has a little blood in him and not know it (and viceversa). I think the idea is to keep pure balls and pure bloods. So you know what you have and what you're breeding.
Re: Looking for blood ball (super ball) and or carpet ball (carpall)
There is no shortage of pureblood specimens in the trade or in the wild. Ball pythons and blood pythons should be just fine even if a few hybrids make it into their gene pool. Do the majority of breeders have the same concern for Ball pythons with spiders & womas and their neurological issues, deserts with their female sterility, or inbreeding in general to develop/prove out morphs? I'm thinking both species will be ok.
Last edited by chosen2030; 07-13-2013 at 11:06 PM.
With something as noticeable as a super blood, the odds of genetic corruption are low. Although, I think breeding them back to one species is going too far, what people usually breed are 50/50 hybrids. I, personally, want to establish "pure" 50/50 superballs as a domestic subspecies, after a couple generations of selective breeding and stablizing genetics.
What I believe is a problem with hybrids and integrades are closely related species like carpets, boa constrictors, and short taileds. However, even a Mongrel ball (25% blood 75% ball) is distinguishable among other pythons. F2 Superballs look wicked cool.