Alright, yeah, I was incorrect about isolating the gene to make the normal blue eyed recessive... they are a possible offspring but it would be hard to know without breeding.

Basically, if you have a clutch of, we'll say two mojaves for BEL. You get 1/4 normal, 1/2 mojave, 1/2 blue eyed leucistic. Now... If the Gene for blue eyes is separate than the leucistic gene, it may have crossed over in a percentage of the offspring. If it crosses over on the normal chromosome of one of the mojaves, you'd have a blue eyed mojove, if it crosses over onto either chromosome for the normal, breeding it to a blue eyed leucistic would produce 1/2 blue eyed mojove's. A blue eyed mojave would have one Mojove/blue eyed chromosome and one blue eyed chromosome. That could be bred out to isolate the blue eyed gene. It's basically a matter of waiting for a blue eyed mojave, or breeding the normals from the Mojave children to mojaves/BEL.

The same goes with spider wobble, etc. The difference is, I'd guess the blue eyed gene is recessive while the wobble might be co-dom/dom.

Now, let me know what you think about this next part. Perhaps Homozygous wobble is deadly, but hetero is survivable. This would explain why no super spider exists.... If you isolated it, you'd have yourself(potentially) a new morph.. or a homozygous spider.