Temps were 88F and humidity stayed right at about 70%, sometimes higher or lwoer(but that could have been flucuating readings from opening the incubator too).
I do not know what produced Sam. I stated in the post, the breedings were Spider x NORMAL females.
I only stated the facts from my breedings, and make no claims as to anything yet. I put the facts up here due to the fact that if Sam is a homozygous spider, then it COULD be some issues with his genetic offspring.
No one can say that it has nothing to do with it since the offspring aren't spider x spider, since no one has proved to have a homozygous spider. When someone proves a homozygous spider and breeds it without any issues with the offspring, then you could say the mortality has nothing to do with the spider gene.
I'm hoping it was not genetics that killed the hatchlings, since that means it's something *I* did, and something *I* can correct. If it is Sam's genetics causing high mortality then I have to find a different spider male, and Sam is an incrediable snake.
Thanks for the gentics numbers Randy, I get confused after a couple pudits, so I can't lay it all out that way. Great to be able to just read it.