» Site Navigation
1 members and 586 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,912
Threads: 249,117
Posts: 2,572,190
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, coda
|
-
Registered User
I have a question about Spider BPs
I've been reading everything I can find out about morphs, mainly spiders. Some websites say that spiders are dominant, while others say they are co-dominant. I'm new to the morph-scene, but it's my understanding that if you breed a normal BP to a co-dominant (spider) the clutch will be 50% morph (spider) and 50% normal on average.
Have any of you ever gotten spiders from a spider/normal cross?
Thanks, Michael
-
-
Re: I have a question about Spider BPs
Thomas "Slim" Whitman
Never Met A Ball Python I Didn't Like 
-
-
Registered User
Re: I have a question about Spider BPs
Robert's Reptiles
1.0 mystic
0.1 pastel butter
1.0 pastel yellow belly
1.1 mojave
0.1 cinny
0.7 normals

-
-
Registered User
Re: I have a question about Spider BPs
Thanks guys. Those were two sites I had not seen. I think my first morph is going to be a spider. Any idea who much a young spider female would cost at a reptile expo?
-
-
Re: I have a question about Spider BPs
 Originally Posted by M&J in NC
Have any of you ever gotten spiders from a spider/normal cross?
Thanks, Michael
I do every year.
Spiders are definitely a dominant mutation. Dominant meaning that the Heterozygous form and Homozygous form are the same, but visually different from wild-type. Most people believe that the homozygous form is lethal, but I have heard of at least one Spider that is a possible Homozygous, and has produced nothing but Spiders. So either way, the homozygous form has not proved to be different from the heterozygous form (which would be co-dominant or incomplete dominant).
Hope that wasn't too confusing, and answered your question.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to muddoc For This Useful Post:
-
BPnet Veteran
Re: I have a question about Spider BPs
 Originally Posted by muddoc
I do every year.
Spiders are definitely a dominant mutation. Dominant meaning that the Heterozygous form and Homozygous form are the same, but visually different from wild-type. Most people believe that the homozygous form is lethal, but I have heard of at least one Spider that is a possible Homozygous, and has produced nothing but Spiders. So either way, the homozygous form has not proved to be different from the heterozygous form (which would be co-dominant or incomplete dominant).
Hope that wasn't too confusing, and answered your question.
Really that would be great, I had not heard of a possible Homozygous spider yet. I have heard of the possible Homozygous Pinstripe.... BHB has one I believe.
As for the Price on a Female spider at a show that would depend on age/quality/vendor.
I would say expect to pay a minimum of $250 for a hatchling female
-
-
Registered User
Re: I have a question about Spider BPs
They are dominant because there is no super form of the morph. Just like pins are.
-
-
Re: I have a question about Spider BPs
 Originally Posted by southb
They are dominant because there is no super form of the morph. Just like pins are.
That is not what makes them dominant.
-
The Following User Says Thank You to muddoc For This Useful Post:
-
Registered User
-
The Following User Says Thank You to Bluebead For This Useful Post:
-
Re: Dominant Vs Codominant
 Originally Posted by Bluebead
Codominant is where super forms come into play.
IE cinnamon is the heterogenous form while black ball is the homogenous form. 
This happens with all of the 'pastels', yellow bellies, fires etc.
(I'm thinking in cinnamon right now b/c my virgin male had his first lock tonight for valentines  
I am not correcting you, because that was a good description. However, the use of the word super is only used when talking about snake genetics. It is not actually a genetic term, and I think it is why people get confused about how genetics work.
Co-dominant (or incomplete dominant) is actually defined as an inheritable trait in which the heterozygous form looks different than normal and the Homozygous form is different than the heterozygous form. As I said, you are not wrong, I just want people to understand that a super is really a homozygous animal.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|