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wow! I honostly have never seen a 2 headed bp. Cornsnakes but never bp's. Which head does the eating? Lol. Thats really cool.
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BPnet Veteran
Very cool animal. Glad to see it's doing well. Thanks for sharing!
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Registered User
Re: 2 headed ball python update :-)
 Originally Posted by redstormlax12
Thank you for pointing this out. Manipulating the genotype would be actually splicing in genes into the genome of the organism. And this isn't easy. It takes the ability to cut out a gene sequence from one genome then transplant it into a vessel such as a virus that then splices the gene into the genome of the intended organism. Even when this is achieved that actual chances of the process being viable is slim to none.
But deffinetly great snake. Im glad its doing well. In my opinion, I dont think we should be selectively breeding for these mutations since there are such high mortality rates.
I (barely) remember my college genetics classes, but isn't it considered genotypic manipulation any time you selectively breed for phenotypic characteristics? I know that breeders aren't gene splicing, but I wonder whether the community as a whole tracks bloodlines sufficiently to prevent inbreeding, given that the desired phenotypic traits seem to have a common ideal. Breed for the perfect white, and all that.
Dog breeders have seen the effects of inbreeding on the general health of many breeds. Perhaps BP's are in danger of that same thing. I understand that a two-headed snake is probably not a result of breeding through generations for desired color patterns. But what dangers lurk in the form of weakened immune systems, and even subtle physical changes that we simply can't predict?
On the other hand, what happens in the wild? I suspect that there may be as much or more inbreeding going on among regional populations, especially considering the low survival rates among offspring.
Thanks for the discussion - I'm new to this stuff, and really just trying to learn.
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Re: 2 headed ball python update :-)
 Originally Posted by eracer
I (barely) remember my college genetics classes, but isn't it considered genotypic manipulation any time you selectively breed for phenotypic characteristics? I know that breeders aren't gene splicing, but I wonder whether the community as a whole tracks bloodlines sufficiently to prevent inbreeding, given that the desired phenotypic traits seem to have a common ideal. Breed for the perfect white, and all that.
Dog breeders have seen the effects of inbreeding on the general health of many breeds. Perhaps BP's are in danger of that same thing. I understand that a two-headed snake is probably not a result of breeding through generations for desired color patterns. But what dangers lurk in the form of weakened immune systems, and even subtle physical changes that we simply can't predict?
On the other hand, what happens in the wild? I suspect that there may be as much or more inbreeding going on among regional populations, especially considering the low survival rates among offspring.
Thanks for the discussion - I'm new to this stuff, and really just trying to learn.
I think selective breeding still counts as genotype manipulation, but it's at a lower level. And the sort of recessive/dominant thing we're doing is a much more straightforward thing, largely only affecting one minor, naturally-occurring gene... whereas with dogs, you're selecting for a whole slew of related traits. And then repeatedly selecting, over and over. So there are much more dramatic results on the gross anatomy and behavior of the dogs.
Whereas ball pythons morphs are still basically ball pythons, just with different paint jobs. It's pretty much a single-gene phenomenon. VERY TINY genotype manipulation.
But inbreeding, yeah, that's potentially an area of concern. Because it's much more financially lucrative to breed your recessives together... until you have a smaller and smaller gene pool... and then what happens is everyone in that tiny gene pool is carrying the same copies of a whole lot of genes, not just the one gene that controls the morph...
...and THEN when you breed members of that same gene pool together, the chances of the offspring getting two copies of EVERYTHING goes up, and not just for the morph gene. And some genes are harmful when you have two copies. So you run into the same kinds of health problems as you get with small human populations.
Basically, I think you're right to worry about it? But we're going to see it popping up in corn snakes and boas first, because we already have lots of triple and quadruple hets for recessive traits that are being inbred...
(But I DON'T think it will result in two-headed snakes, because those are just siamese twins. If you want more two-headed snakes, start selecting for twins and twin-egg producers.)
Last edited by loonunit; 11-13-2010 at 06:41 PM.
Reason: grammar, I doesn't do it good.
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BPnet Veteran
great to see them doing well
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Registered User
Re: 2 headed ball python update :-)
 Originally Posted by jbean7916
glad to here he/they are doing well!! Would love to see an xray of them and see just where they're conjoined!
you've lost the previous thread about it. I posted an X-ray ;-)
Last edited by Quality_Snakes; 11-14-2010 at 05:40 PM.
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Registered User
Re: 2 headed ball python update :-)
 Originally Posted by darkolako
well that is interesting I would love to know how they control the body movement, there are 2 brains and I know this is very hard to prove just by looking but to me it seemed like the non eating head on the video was the one that started moving the body forward, and then you see it quickly moves backwards like the other head getting a better position to finish eating it.
of course I am just guessing and I am not sure if to love this rare animal or feel sorry for him
how is his behavior just like any other of your snakes.. ?
anyways thanks for sharing.
as far as only one head (dodesn't matter which one) wants to control the body it moves fine. but when both wanna move then it's a bit weird
for the rest he behaves like a normal snake (looking for hot spots and hideing places, drinking, peeing, pooing etc...).
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Re: 2 headed ball python update :-)
Is it still alive?? That would be amazing
Sent from my SM-G920W8 using Tapatalk
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I usually ding people who resurrect old thread. But this one. This one was worth it. So I will give you a pass.
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