Man life is too busy!!
Hello everyone,
First off I would like to thank Don Soderberg and Joe Pierce for contacting me to inform me of this threads existence. Thanks guys!
Here is the whole story as best I can tell it...
Back in 1999 I was informed by a friend (no longer in this business) that there were these Corn Snakes being sold as Hypos but they are actually T+ Albinos. I was a bit leary of his claims as I thought for sure that if this was true that the breeder would have known it. Anyways... I figured that I should just try to get the animals just to see for myself. In 2000 I received my pair. The male, a strange looking Amelanistic, disappointed me as I was hoping for a pair of "Hypos". However the female was the coolest looking Hypo I had ever seen! Here is the pair as young adults...
So I raised them up... they grew slow and I thought that they were a little weak. One day my friend called me to tell me that he bred his and that they must be in BAD need of an outcross because all of his hatchings died shortly after hatching. That was pretty much they end of his project shortly thereafter he dissolved his collection and left the reptile business. I was a bit concerned about the projects weakness but may animals eventually grew into large adults so I decided to breed them together. What fun! The eggs hatched and all but 2 of the hatchlings died within 2 days of hatching. I was left with ONE Amelanistic female that resembled the male above (but slightly more colorful) and ONE "Hypomelanistic" male that was WAY finer than the mother! Here he is shortly after his first shed...
Ok... thanks for reading this far if you're still with me!
So there I was, summer of 2002 with a 1.1 of these "Odd Amels" and a 1.1 of these "Odd Hypos" one of which was INSANE looking. I showed them to Don Soderberg at the ETHS Houston Show in Sept. of 2002 and he loved them. I handed him an unlabeled deli cup containing the crazy looking male and he just stared and then said "I think you've got it! I think THAT is a T+ Albino!"
Key word above... THINK... we still have to find out why it came out the way it did. I have never stated that they animals was INDEED T+ Amelanistic. On with this long boring stuff... I thought maybe if I bred then animal to a long term standard Hypo project it may give me some results. In 2003 I bred the original female "Hypo" to a male Hypo Het. for Amel that came from Brian Barczyk (BHB) some years before. I figured at the time that if this "odd hypo" was a hypo that I should get all Hypos or Amel Hypos (since the original female has been proven to be Het. for Amel). Well come hatch time in July of 2003 this clutch hatched...
The results... Normals, Amelanistics & "Odd Hypos" (just like the original mother NOT like the son above) So I can conclude that the "Odd Hypo" is NOT a standard Hypo variant AND either the "Odd Hypo" is some sort of dominant mutation OR the BHB is het. for this mutation. I spoke at length with Brian about the latter and he stated that he had NEVER seen a Corn like that pop up in his collection anywhere.
So my next idea... we are in Louisiana and anyone that knows about the wild populations of Corns knows that here in southeastern Louisiana our wild Corns are as NORMAL as normal gets! I have several WC Normal females that I use every year to outcross projects that look somewhat weak. Uh Oh... I have NO MALE! I need a male WC to breed to the original female "Odd Hypo" to prove her dominance. So this season... 2004 I intended to find a real deal WC normal male to breed to her. Well... I found one and it was about 3 weeks after breeding was all done
So I bred the female "Odd Hypo" to a Normal Stripe Het. Amel and the clutch just hatched about 5 days ago... yup... same outcome as the 2003 clutch... Normals, Amelanistics and "Odd Hypos" all should be 100% Het. Stripe.
Next year 2005 she WILL be bred to a WC Normal male and her INSANE looking son is going to a ton of stuff (man it SUCKED not having a male to start this project off) including WC females. My goal in breeding him to the WC females is to strengthen this project while also perhaps proving out that he is indeed a SUPER form of this Co-Dominant "Odd Hypo or T+?" project.
My conclusions... the original Amel male may be and "Odd Hypo" Amel and the amelanism masks his "hyponess" and when bred with his sister "Odd Hypo" they make some Supers (the outcome should be 25%) That is the only realistic way that I can explain how I got that INSANE looking male from the clutch in 2002. Here are a few more pictures for you guys to look at...
The 2002 lone male hatchling with a standard Hypo...
An eye/body color comparison that I did in early 2003 between the 2002 male and a standard Hypo and a standard Amel...
Ok... are these things Ultra Hypos?!? They very well may be. Especially if Ultras are thought of to be some form of dominance! I love these snakes and I can't wait to see them mixed up with everything but I want to take the time to figure out the genes and separate them from the others so that my results can be pure and consistent. Am I a fool for that?? I hope not... my long term goal with this project is to weed out the Amelanism!!! Imagine that... an Albino gene being a plague not a blessing... ONLY in Corn Snakes!!
Thank you all for your patience in reading this... I am saving it to file on my computer so if I need it again someday I won't have to re-type it all!
COMMENTS.... PLEASE????
Oh... and one more thing... I will get new pics of ALL of these animals soon. Those are all old pics taken with an older digital camera. I will get Celia, our fantastic photographer, to take some new pics for you!