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1.0 Lav het amel, blood, stripe

Susan said:
It had a small head and a large, plump body. I still see that look on some corn snakes. The look may not be as prominent on some, but the proportions of head size and body size are still not correct and still noticeable.
I've heard of these snakes referred to corns with a "tiny-ass head".

I can't remember who coined the phrase, though.
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regards,
jazz

(Beautiful specimen, btw.)
 
:-offtopic this thread makes me wonder about the growth rate of wild corns? How many years does it take for a corn in the wild to reach the point where they will reproduce? I know in captivitiy things are diffrent, but does anyone know of a study on this?
 
Tinycritters said:
:-offtopic this thread makes me wonder about the growth rate of wild corns? How many years does it take for a corn in the wild to reach the point where they will reproduce? I know in captivitiy things are diffrent, but does anyone know of a study on this?
As soon as I can find radio transimitters small enough and funding for the study...I'm going for that one!
 
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