Quote Originally Posted by bait4snake
I think you're thinking too much... I think. lol

Ok, if Spiders for example really do make a homozygous spider that's indistinguishable from a heterozygous spider... follow this logic -

Let's say all ball pythons in their normal form were spiders. The bumblebee would be a Pastel, the Honey Bee would be a hypomelanistic. Now, let's say someone magically found this REALLY awesome morph called an "alien head"! It had more black striping on it's backs and on the sides, a nearly patternless head, as well as none of that white speckling up the sides!

If you bred that "alien head" morph to your normal (which is a spider), you'd get nothing but normals (spider) that were het for "alien head".

See, what we think of as a normal "alien head" ball python is actually a recessive gene to what we call a Spider. (this is all presuming you can make a homozygous spider that looks the same as a heterozygous spider)

Just my buck and a half.
Im so lost

and lovepig I would def. have to see to believe...although if you showed me anything I would probably believe it. If you got pics of the super granite that would be cool.