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Two heads are better then one, I guess...

Have you considered offering it to a University, for a fair profit, so that it could be used as a teaching tool? Maybe a University with a good herp program?
 
Rich Z said:
more then likely I will just take it to the Daytona Beach Expo and put a big price tag on it.

I know where my new first stop to gawk at is..wait it was my old first stop as well. :grin01:
 
Rich Z said:
Well my wife got it to eat a frozen/thawed anole yesterday. She said only one of the heads acted interested and the other one was just watching curiously.

That is just too bizarre! :bang:

Just curious, but I presume it must have shed OK. How did that work? As they normally work the old skin off at the nose, then slither out of it, how did it go with a 2 header? Did they actually start simultaneously or did just one go for it and leave the other with just it's head skin to shed???

Man, this thing would be fascinating to own if it lives any length of time ....

:cheers:
 
I had to assist it with the shed. It got stuck at the junction of the two heads, as I had suspected it would. I think this will happen each time it sheds because there is no way otherwise for it to happen unless the skin would split at that point allowing it to shed the rest of the body.
 
Rich...

Hey Rich -
How did things finally work out with this guy - just curious if he went to Daytona with you?
 
My wife got the "driver's side head" eating green anoles pretty agressively, and a local guy here in Tallahassee decided that he wanted it. So I sold it to him for a pretty decent sum. I think it has a real good home now as this guy is a real fanatic about taking care of his animals.
 
a parting shot of that critter....

One last photo that I took before I sold it....
 

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Good on you for selling it. I guess the money will go towards feeding your keepers/breeders for a fair while! I had an interesting one hatch out this year (not nearly as interesting as yours though!) and Idecided to sell her after all. Her sale price goes to cover the next 6 months food bill, so I can't complain either way. I'm pairing the same parents next year so who knows, they might give me another.
 
Joining the conversation a little late, but great snake! It's a wonderful primer for genetic discussions!!

princess said:
The snake must be one sex as this kind of conjoined twin is the result of of an embryo trying to split into twins and getting stuck at this point (incomplete sepparation) so it's one snake splitting into 2, not 2 snakes joining into 1 (impossible as far as I know)

Actually, while very rare this is not an impossibility. There are actually people wandering around out there with mixed sets of DNA from fraternal twins that fused within the first few days of conception. What happens is the single cells (blastocytes) form when egg and sperm join, but then the two sets of DNA fuse. Since embryonic cells are not specialized yet they multiply until they grow into different body structures and tissues. While I haven't heard of a two headed conjoined twin there are men out there with floating ovaries and women with regressed testies (each with a separate DNA fingerprint from the whole person as these developed from the fraternal twin egg that fused). There have been some cases on file and it's still pretty new, but there are people with two sets of DNA because of this (sometimes only in certain tissues or organs but other times mixed cells across the entire body).

Truly facinating stuff!! Can't help myself being a bio teacher and all!! :D
 
From a biological point of view a true Chimera (this is the best way I have heard to describe this phenomenon) is extremely fascinating. I person, or animal, having 2 completely different sets of DNA in their body could cause all sorts of interesting complications ;) . Consider, for instance, reproduction and DNA fingerprinting. Just a little food for thought :)
 
Lab created chimaera's are not uncommon. There is no splicing of DNA involved, so there is no danger of unleashing genetic mutant monsters upon the world. Some endangered birds are actually being saved by chimaera's. A scientist took some DNA from an endangered grouse, and made a bunch of embryo clones. Then when they hit the notochord stage he spliced the chunk of notochord corresponding with the gonads into chicken embryos with the notochords at the same point in development. The result is a bunch of chickens that are tame, not easily stressed, disease resistant, and lay 300+ eggs a year instead of 5 or 6. The potential to hatch out a large number of endangered birds in a short time exists with a program like that, and the offspring are 100% grouse, with not one bit of chicken in them.

You *could* do something similar with rare snakes. :) Splicing cloned embryo notochord chunks corresponding to the gonads into corn snake embryos, and get corns that eat well, adjust to captivity well, but all their babies would be something rare like rhinocerous rat snakes. :wavey:

On topic, that bicephalic corn is flippin' sweet! I'm jealous.
 
I am hoping that the fellow you sold this amazing creature to is willing to keep us updated as it developes. If ya didn't you should have made it part of the deal!
 
Hi Rich,
I just registered today--have been trying to contact you. I am very interested in your dicephalic corn snake. I have had a dicephalic milksnake for more than a year. I can give you some advice. I have been studying them for 30 years and am working on a book. I would like to document your specimen by writing a report for publication. I have a couple lay articles on two-headed snakes. If you're interested I will send you pdf's.
Also, I collect snake calendars and applaud your idea of making one! Please do, as there are very few devoted to snakes in recent years.
Please send me your email.
Regards, Van
 
Yes, sorry but it was sold to a local guy here in Tallahassee. I need to call him in a day or two, so I will see how it is doing for him.

Thanks.
 
Sorry but he does not have a computer at all.

I did see that snake yesterday and she is doing just fine under his care. Getting some size to her and looking in fine health.
 
Just a short update on the two headed corn. When the guy showed it to me, he mentioned that it's really odd how it wants to feed. One head will eat pinks, and the other will only eat anoles. Guess the "feed response" signal doesn't come from the belly after all..... :)
 
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