Let's go back 20 yrs ago when I had many snakes. Had a beautiful albino Burmese for 7 years and woke up one day to her curled around 4 eggs. She did Parthenogenesis. Only 1nof the clutch made it and it was a normal female that I kept for a year then sold. This is the wildest thing in nature for sure!!!!
are snakes born from parthenogenesis more likely to die or have defects than normally bred snakes? cuz im buying some from a guy and theyre really cheap. so i thought he was selling me to them for cheap cuz they might be dying
OK, here goes nothing: Mark 16:17, 'And the resurrected Jesus said, "And these signs will accompany those who believe... they will pick up snakes with their hands!"
That nice looking snake near the end looks more like a spinner blast coral glow. Looks identical to it actually, I wonder if it has spider in it as well.
@@ChrisHardwickanimaladventures Yeah,I realize that, I just mean that it doesn't look like the others with that mixture of genes, and looks almost identical to a spinner blast coral glow, if you look some up, you'll see what I mean.
Mated a female normal with a pastel Mojave proven male, and got 9 good eggs. After hatching all are normal’s and look like the mother. One is slightly kinked and not sure it’ll make it. But I think you describe what happen to my clutch. No pastel or Mojave at all. Thx again for your great information. Missing your new videos.
Once the embryo implants to the side of the egg, if it were to roll/turn during incubation the fluids would drown the embryo. Marking an x tells you what side is up, and if it does turn, it can give a breeder time to rotate it back hopefully before the embryo is lost.
This is the exact reason I don’t have female reptiles (except for my gargoyle gecko which I got before I learned they usually lay eggs regardless of whether or not they’ve been bred) - I’m not interested in breeding and I’m like terrified of dealing with eggs and calcium levels (for geckos) and possible eggbinding. I’ve read two threads on ball-pythons.net about females who had laid eggs even though they had never been with males. In both cases the snakes were around 20+ years old and it made me wonder if it was nature kicking in like “I’m running out of time to procreate, better just get it done on my own!”
Currently going through this with my boa. She's a virgin 10+ year old Jungle Super Sunglow... Eeek. Wonder what's going to happen. Hope the babes will be okay.
Just hatched a partho baby a few days ago
Question: If parthenogenesis results in an exact copy of the mother, how come some female snakes can asexually produce a male snake?
Man i see that Bamboo gene is one that looks awesome as babies and adults.
Brilliant Topic awesome video!
Let's go back 20 yrs ago when I had many snakes. Had a beautiful albino Burmese for 7 years and woke up one day to her curled around 4 eggs. She did Parthenogenesis. Only 1nof the clutch made it and it was a normal female that I kept for a year then sold. This is the wildest thing in nature for sure!!!!
That's awesome!
Its not possible for an albino to produce a normal through parthenogenesis
@@atlaslucius please run the breakdown on this for us that are behind the ball here...
Awesome video again beautiful bamboo ball you showed and very nice info some lizards species are like that too.
You'd squirm too if someone was using a probe on you! Ha ha. Love that baby snake with the orange sides, that's a hold back for sure!
Hey Chris I been moving to a new house this week so catching up. But great info my friend. Missed your vids
are snakes born from parthenogenesis more likely to die or have defects than normally bred snakes? cuz im buying some from a guy and theyre really cheap. so i thought he was selling me to them for cheap cuz they might be dying
Not sure, I've never had any born that way.
"Do you have a moment to speak about our lord and saviour, Snek Jesus?"
OK, here goes nothing:
Mark 16:17, 'And the resurrected Jesus said, "And these signs will accompany those who believe... they will pick up snakes with their hands!"
@@ChrisHardwickanimaladventures we can make a religion out of this
Why do you use clinch wrap in conjunction with a cover? I normally just use one or the other. Using just cover now
It won't keep the humidity high enough without the glad wrap.
Congrats on the combo
Thanks!
Great video Chris, and you got some beautiful babies from that clutch!
My question is does everyone or serious breeders works together. To make the best genes possible
Hes not taking questions apparently
nice my man keep the ship sailing looking forward to you going to a show
That nice looking snake near the end looks more like a spinner blast coral glow. Looks identical to it actually, I wonder if it has spider in it as well.
Yes, that should be a Pastel Pinstripe Coral Glow, no spider in the mix.
@@ChrisHardwickanimaladventures Yeah,I realize that, I just mean that it doesn't look like the others with that mixture of genes, and looks almost identical to a spinner blast coral glow, if you look some up, you'll see what I mean.
First again getting my record back haha and you were so excited about your 3 gene combo you almost screamed haha
Mated a female normal with a pastel Mojave proven male, and got 9 good eggs. After hatching all are normal’s and look like the mother. One is slightly kinked and not sure it’ll make it. But I think you describe what happen to my clutch. No pastel or Mojave at all. Thx again for your great information. Missing your new videos.
Why do ppl mark an x on the eggs?
That's where the embryo is and you want it on top.
Once the embryo implants to the side of the egg, if it were to roll/turn during incubation the fluids would drown the embryo. Marking an x tells you what side is up, and if it does turn, it can give a breeder time to rotate it back hopefully before the embryo is lost.
Ever been probed by an alien? I am sure you would try to get away too lol
That's awesome that some of them are oh k 👍🔥😉
This is the exact reason I don’t have female reptiles (except for my gargoyle gecko which I got before I learned they usually lay eggs regardless of whether or not they’ve been bred) - I’m not interested in breeding and I’m like terrified of dealing with eggs and calcium levels (for geckos) and possible eggbinding.
I’ve read two threads on ball-pythons.net about females who had laid eggs even though they had never been with males. In both cases the snakes were around 20+ years old and it made me wonder if it was nature kicking in like “I’m running out of time to procreate, better just get it done on my own!”
Currently going through this with my boa. She's a virgin 10+ year old Jungle Super Sunglow... Eeek. Wonder what's going to happen. Hope the babes will be okay.
You don't cut just in case there is a problem ?? Sometimes cutting can save the snake
A lot of people cut, some have lost snakes from it and decided to never cut again.
Good one, nice babies
Do you have an email ?
I do, but I get about 100 emails a day LOL
First
graet babby babby snake,s