2010 Hypo Lavender Motley

Hypo Lavender Motley (no aka)
Most Commonly Used Name: Hypo Lavender Motley
Mode of Genetic Inheritance:
Recessive
Morph Type: Triple Mutation Compound
Eye Color:  Red pupil & body ground colored iris (see details below about some having Black pupils)


This triple recessive mutation is the product of the color gene mutation, Lavender, the Hypo A mutation (sometimes considered a color mutation for its impact on black and some ground color zones, and the pattern mutation, Motley. As with many Lavender morphs, eye pupils can be red/pink or black. 

 

What to expect:
Most hatchlings are some shade of pale lavender or gray.  Patterns vary from classic (orderly) Motley pattern to chaotic Motley pattern to having no Motley dorsal markings at all.  With most Motley types, you can depend on the belly being devoid of the typical corn snake checkered belly, but in Lavender types (and lately, a few other morphs) some belly markings are evident.  Belly markings on Lavender Motley types must be random, scarce, and discontiguous (no checkering).  Oddly, I have not yet witnessed any belly markings on Striped Lavender types (odd because Motley and Stripe are alleles on the same chromosome locus).

Important Note:
The advertising images on our web site are representations of the average adult example of each morph.  These images are not renderings of the actual animals being offered, (except for uniquely offered snakes found in the SURPLUS section of this web site).  We do not provide pictures of individual hatchling snakes for sale, nor do we recommend that you ever choose a new pet based on an image of its neonatal form.  Corns change so dramatically from hatchling to adult, they will NEVER have the same colors or contrasts throughout maturity. While most of the snakes we produce will mature to resemble the featured adult image(s) on our web site, unlike manufactured products that are respectively clones of each other, the nature of polygenic variation results in each animal being similar but not identical to others of its morph. The snake we select for you may not mature to be identical to the pictured examples, but will be chosen based on our experience of observing which neonates will mature to properly represent their respective morph.  We take this responsibility very seriously, and therefore publish the guarantee that we will exchange your SMR snake if it does not mature to be like our advertised examples.


Cinder

Cinder ( aka: Ashy or Z or Anery C )
Most Commonly Used Name: Cinder
Mode of Genetic Inheritance:
Recessive
Morph Type: Single Recessive Mutation
Eye Color: Black pupil & body ground-colored iris


The third and newest Anery-type mutation to be discovered in corns, Cinder mutants are also marketed as Ashy and sometimes Z or Anery C. Cinder features that distinguish it from other mutations (other than being a unique genetic allele) include — but are not restricted to — body shape, general coloration, atypical belly pattern, and head shape.  Relative to most corn snakes; the snout profile is more pointed, belly pattern is less definied, cluttered, and less-orderly checkered, and on most Cinders, a crosscut-view of the body is somewhat “tent” shaped (spinal keel is highly pronounced – compared to most corns). That uniquely remarkable (and immediately obvious) anatomical feature has never previously been genetically demonstrated in a corn snake mutation or in wild-types.  Most corns have the general cross-section shape of a loaf of bread (the scientific name of the Corn Snake, Pantherophis guttatus derives from the Greek translation for Pan-ther-ophis loosely means: Pan = bread (as if you looked at the crosscut-section of a bread loaf), thero = beast, and ophis = snake, but the Cinder’s dorsum is peaked, compared to the more flattened dorsum of virtually all other corns.  Hence — compared to other corns — the overall number of atypical characteristics of this mutation rival any other mutant or wild-type corns at this time.

Here is a cross-cut section comparative of a typical corn and a typical Cinder corn.

loafcinder copy

What to expect:
As neonates, many Cinders have brown or predominantly reddish markings on a gray or silver background.  As adults, some will mature to have gray markings on gray background color zones, but some will retain the reddish-brown markings upon a gray background.  Of those that change from reddish-brown to gray, some of the peripheral scales of the markings have red or pink coloration in them, but most of the Cinder corns I’ve seen mature to be two shades of gray with pink or red highlights inside the markings or at the edges of the markings. Those pink or red scale highlights often appear to be red skin beneath the scales, but I have not personally owned one like that. The peaked dorsal keel on most Cinders does not become prominent until they are over a year old. 

Don’t let the list of unusual features deter your interest in acquiring one of these beautiful corn snake mutants, since “atypical” is the very nature of mutations.  If not for the variety offered by mutations, keeping corns would be a very boring hobby.  All the Cinders we’ve had will eat you outta mouse and home, and never had any health issues.  In another 20 years, the corn snake hobby is going to see many more unusual looking features than this one.


Important Note:
The advertising images on our web site are representations of the average adult example of each morph.  These images are not renderings of the actual animals being offered, (except for uniquely offered snakes found in the SURPLUS section of this web site).  We do not provide pictures of individual hatchling snakes for sale, nor do we recommend that you ever choose a new pet based on an image of its neonatal form.  Corns change so dramatically from hatchling to adult, they will NEVER have the same colors or contrasts throughout maturity. While most of the snakes we produce will mature to resemble the featured adult image(s) on our web site, unlike manufactured products that are respectively clones of each other, the nature of polygenic variation results in each animal being similar but not identical to others of its morph. The snake we select for you may not mature to be identical to the pictured examples, but will be chosen based on our experience of observing which neonates will mature to properly represent their respective morph.  We take this responsibility very seriously, and therefore publish the guarantee that we will exchange your SMR snake if it does not mature to be like our advertised examples.

Tessera 07-01-15b

Show & $ell

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This 2010 40″ female Tessera (from Tessera X Miami Phase parentage) is currently eating frozen/thawed adult mice.  She laid 22 eggs earlier this summer.  Her $295.00 price includes     

2010 Striped Creamsicle

Striped Creamsicle (no aka)
Most Commonly Used Name:  Striped Creamsicle
Mode of Genetic Inheritance: recessive corn snake Amel + Emory’s Rat Snake
Morph Type: Recessive HYBRID mutation
Eye Color: Red pupil & body ground colored iris

 

 

Except for the Striped mutation, this morph is just a pattern variant of the Creamsicle HYBRID mutation.

Formerly considered an intergrade of what used to be two corn snake subspecies (Elaphe guttatus guttatus X Elaphe guttatus emoryi), Creamsicles are the final product of crossing the Emory’s Rat (aka: Great Plains Rat Snake) snake with an Amel corn. Since the new taxonomic classification assigns distinct species to each (Pantherophis emoryi and Pantherophis guttatus), Creamsicles are now officially considered HYBRIDS.  ANY progeny from Creamsicles or any corn snake that has any degree of Emory’s Rat Snake in it, is considered a HYBRID.  The albinos are called Creamsicles and the non-albinos are called Root Beers.

 

 

What to expect:

The Striped mutation slightly enhances the saturation of the Creamsicle coloration, but otherwise, they’re just what you’d expect; a striped version of the basic Creamsicle hybrid. There is very little change in appearance from hatchling to adult.

 

SURPLUS section of this web site).  We do not provide pictures of individual hatchling snakes for sale, nor do we recommend that you ever choose a new pet based on an image of its neonatal form.  Corns change so dramatically from hatchling to adult, they will NEVER have the same colors or contrasts throughout maturity.While most of the snakes we produce will mature to resemble the featured adult image(s) on our web site, unlike manufactured products that are respectively clones of each other, the nature of polygenic variation results in each animal being similar but not identical to others of its morph. The snake we select for you may not mature to be identical to the pictured examples, but will be chosen based on our experience of observing which neonates will mature to properly represent their respective morph.  We take this responsibility very seriously, and therefore publish the guarantee that we will exchange your SMR snake if it does not mature to be like our advertised examples.

2010 Okeetee 09-27

This 2010 Okeetee has spectacular.  He is not from my Extreme Okeetee lines, but is almost a contender for that quality of color.  He’s 31″ long now, so he will be breedable in 2012.  He loves frozen/thawed hopper to small adult mice. 

2010 Plasma 071611

This 2010 Male Plasma (Lavender Bloodred – aka: Diffused Lavender) is now 30″ long and eating frozen/thawed small adult mice.  He is a great example of a bi-colored Plasma.  He is homozygous for two  recessively-inherited mutations; Lavender and Diffused (Bloodred).  His colors should fade more with age, compared to most corns that continue to color saturate for a few more years before hitting age-fading color exhibition.

 

Glossary Term Hyperlinks:

aerobic allele amelanistic anerythrism anomaly anterior atypical axanthic Bechtel, Dr. H. Bernard brumation Carl Kauffeld carotene carotenoid Celcius chromatophore chromosome cloaca codominant colubrid compound conjunct contiguous cryptosis disjunct diurnal DNA dominant dorsal dysecdysis ecdysis ectothermic embryo embryogenic empirical epidermis erythrism erythrophore F1 Fahrenheit genotype gene genotype gravid guarantee hatchling herpetoculture heritable heredity herpetology heterozygous homozygous Hume hybrid hyper hypomelanistic hypo integument intergrade iridiophore lateral leucism line-breeding locus marker melanin melanophore melanosome Mendelian morph mutation neonate nominate novel ontogenetic out-cross pathogen phenotype pinky polygenic progeny punnett recessive respire rheostat selective variation SMR taxonomy thermoregulation thermostat trait ventral ventral keel wild-type xanthin xanthophore yearling


Morph Hyperlinks:

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Ralph:

Per your request, please, pay $75 each for 1.1 High White Reverse Okeetees for the 2012 season (1.1 = $150.00)

Per your request, please, pay $95 for one female 2010 Gold Dust Motley that is 28 inches long on 10-12-11 ($95.00)

This unique invoice price is $245.00