Heh, yeah, I tend to end up leaving out that part in a lot of my rantings on the subject: I DO think that the "expressing the pattern gene and are selectively bred for lots of red" specimens should be called "Bloodred." Same as Amels that are specifically bred to have no white are distinguished as "special" by calling them sunglows.
I honestly wouldn't expect anyone to just drop the name "bloodred" overnight... I would think the following change on a price list would be easy on everyone and would actually get people
wanting to call it by the "new" name:
(for top-notch, grade-A red red bloodreds)
Bloodred Cornsnake ("Bloodred" pattern, plus solid deep or bright reds)
(for grade-B, or hets or outcrossed-looking, or whatever)
Diffuse Cornsnake (aka "Bloodred" pattern)
(Or whatever name...)
Mochas were changed to Lavenders. "Pine Island Anerythristic" was changed to (mostly) Charcoal. And of course Opal caught on in a heartbeat but it didn't have other competing names... maybe there are a lot of people who never go on the net and haven't heard of it, but it will probably also be appearing in the latest edition of the CSM, too.
Tacking the new "accepted" name in front of it and keeping the old name would probably go over easily for those who already know the old name.
I also think it is more difficult to continue to try to explain to everyone new that there's all these bizarre special exceptions and nobody ever gets what's going on. People ask about Sunglows and they get a straight simple answer
("It's an amel that has also been selectively bred for no white") and show a pic of an amel and a sunglow and they understand it within a matter of minutes.
If they ask about "Bloodreds" the straight simple answer would be,
"It's got the 'whatever' pattern and has also been selectively bred for lots of red coloration." Same deal, IMO.
Darin:
I do know what you mean, I've been using the subject as an anti-boredom tool, too, hehe. The big problem I would see coming from that would be that other people would hear the name
Faded, think it's cool, know they fetch a good price, and start applying it to "stonewashed" and Hurricane-like, and other morphs that have been selectively bred for faded out saddle centers. (There are a lot of non-mutated corns out there that could easily be described as "faded.")
I've been trying to find something in Latin or Greek or whatever that "describes it accurately" and "sounds cool" because I really think both criteria will have to be met for it to be accepted.