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  1. #11
    BPnet Veteran Wild Bill's Avatar
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    Quote Originally Posted by Bill Buchman View Post
    Quite right. Also discovered this year that the Super Stripe cannot reproduce itself 1 in 4 when bred to a normal -- only Specters and Y.B.

    Specter and Y.B. stock has gone up!!!
    You would think so, but some people haven't received the memo.

    Someone is already pre-selling super stripes for less than half of this years price.
    "Wild" Bill Hicok

    Wild Bill's Ball Pythons



  2. #12
    BPnet Veteran Bill Buchman's Avatar
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    Quote Originally Posted by Wild Bill View Post
    You would think so, but some people haven't received the memo.

    Someone is already pre-selling super stripes for less than half of this years price.
    The irony is that I am fairly certain the breeder in question is...the one who discovered/proved this to be the case.
    Bill Buchman

  3. #13
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    Quote Originally Posted by JenH View Post
    Interesting - that means that the yb and specter are the same gene or allele. Pretty cool - we have a new gene complex to work with.......
    I was going to say it before you said it was "true"

    The specter looks kinda normal, it probably carry a special gene that is dominant but not codominant.

    The Super Stripe "stripe" looks like the ivory stripe a lot. So there was a lot of chance that the "specter" gene is just the stripe gene without the YB.

    Just another mutant gene one the same allele .

    I think we should start numbering these, otherwise with all the name it's gonna get confuse. Let's put a # for the allele and a letter for the mutant gene. ex : YB = 04A and specter = 04B, lesser = 07A, mojave = 07B, butter = 07A since IMO it's the same gene.

    Would be funny to see people asking "what can you get with a 01B male with a 064D female who is het for 23A ?'


  4. #14
    BPnet Veteran Nagini88's Avatar
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    so what are the signs of a het super stripe? What do we look for?
    Ball pythons: 1.2 pastel, 1.0 Black Pastel 1.0 mojave(green) 0.1 spider, 1.0 het pied, 1.0 het clown, 1.1 het albino, 0.1 pos het albino, 1.0 shatter, 0.2 normals, 0.1 reduced pattern, 0.3 dinkers
    Corn snakes: 1.0 blood, 0.1 het blood, 0.1 snow, 0.0.1 reverse okeetee
    Geckos: 2.1.2 crested gecko, 0.0.1 leopard gecko
    Boas: 1.0.1 sand boas
    Other: 1.1 mini australian shepherd, 2.0 cats

  5. #15
    West Coast Jungle's Avatar
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    Quote Originally Posted by Nagini88 View Post
    so what are the signs of a het super stripe? What do we look for?
    Someone who is breeding them. They are not so easy to pick out.

  6. #16
    BPnet Veteran nixer's Avatar
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    its from my understanding that as hatchlings they are almost impossible to pick out at first. looking at mine it kinda looks like a yb but its missing alot of the signs

    which is probally why they found it breeding import ybs trying to get ivories

  7. #17
    BPnet Veteran Bill Buchman's Avatar
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    Quote Originally Posted by nixer View Post
    its from my understanding that as hatchlings they are almost impossible to pick out at first. looking at mine it kinda looks like a yb but its missing alot of the signs

    which is probally why they found it breeding import ybs trying to get ivories
    Like many morphs, they are variable by line and even by clutch. I have 2 08 girls from a proven line that look very different thus far. The older (350 grams) is very light and getting lighter. The younger 125 gram is light, but does not have near the golden hues/yellow of the older. Their color may even out as they age.

    I have a captive hatched female that has the color, head markers, and belly to led me to suspect that she is a Spector -- enough to put my Pastel Ivory on her later this spring (he is only 170 grams) -- needs to GROW some -- April I hope.

    My female was bred to Yellow Belly last season and gave me 2 eggs that hatched 2 identical males -- 1 died in the egg. The remaining male has the color, markings, and belly similar to his mom -- and to my proven line Spectors. He is eating well and should be 600 grams by March and I wiil try him with a normal or 2.

    We can guess, postulate, hope, KNOW -- but only breeding will reveal reality to us. As far as marker indicators that are reliable??? I would go with belly and head spot -- color is way too variable!!! Of course you have to know what to look for.

    Spectors have not been posted in detail because people who know they have them don't want people to discover them in there collection. I get that. Although, I think it will be unlikely that many keepers will have them lying around. Although they have been liked to Y.B.''s with regards to alleles and "look" -- I believe they are FAR less common.

    This coming year will be the first that there will be a good number of proven Spectors available for those that want to begin S.S. projects.
    Bill Buchman

  8. #18
    ladybird
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    Quote Originally Posted by Bill Buchman View Post
    Like many morphs, they are variable by line and even by clutch. I have 2 08 girls from a proven line that look very different thus far. The older (350 grams) is very light and getting lighter. The younger 125 gram is light, but does not have near the golden hues/yellow of the older. Their color may even out as they age.

    I have a captive hatched female that has the color, head markers, and belly to led me to suspect that she is a Spector -- enough to put my Pastel Ivory on her later this spring (he is only 170 grams) -- needs to GROW some -- April I hope.

    My female was bred to Yellow Belly last season and gave me 2 eggs that hatched 2 identical males -- 1 died in the egg. The remaining male has the color, markings, and belly similar to his mom -- and to my proven line Spectors. He is eating well and should be 600 grams by March and I wiil try him with a normal or 2.

    We can guess, postulate, hope, KNOW -- but only breeding will reveal reality to us. As far as marker indicators that are reliable??? I would go with belly and head spot -- color is way too variable!!! Of course you have to know what to look for.
    So what exactly do you look for in a Specter? What's different about the belly and head that's different from a normal?

  9. #19
    BPnet Veteran Nagini88's Avatar
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    about how much are spectors going for now adays?
    Ball pythons: 1.2 pastel, 1.0 Black Pastel 1.0 mojave(green) 0.1 spider, 1.0 het pied, 1.0 het clown, 1.1 het albino, 0.1 pos het albino, 1.0 shatter, 0.2 normals, 0.1 reduced pattern, 0.3 dinkers
    Corn snakes: 1.0 blood, 0.1 het blood, 0.1 snow, 0.0.1 reverse okeetee
    Geckos: 2.1.2 crested gecko, 0.0.1 leopard gecko
    Boas: 1.0.1 sand boas
    Other: 1.1 mini australian shepherd, 2.0 cats

  10. #20
    BPnet Veteran Bill Buchman's Avatar
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    Re: Superstripe questions

    Quote Originally Posted by Nagini88 View Post
    about how much are spectors going for now adays?
    $2500 for a male or female hatchling.

    Quote Originally Posted by ladybird View Post
    So what exactly do you look for in a Specter? What's different about the belly and head that's different from a normal?

    Most are light in color, have very small alien heads within a reduced pattern, have a busy belly, and have a distinct head marking/blushing. They are "grainy" at the belly line.

    They are DIFFICULT figure and I would be wiling to bet that a lower % of them prove than maybe any other one possible morph.

    They can have all the markers and not be a Spector.
    Bill Buchman

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