Python regius albina, Python reticulatus albina y Boa constrictor albina

steve

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Hola,

a hora tengo ¨poca¨ cosa porque mañana voy a ser padre ;) ;) ;) y vendido las cosas grande

mando la lista a tu mail privado ;)

Un saludo

Steve
 

dredolar

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Hay muchas controversias al respecto ya que depende de muchos factores. No obstante, las opiniones generales exponen que llegan a medir un poco más que una hembra de regius (unos 2 m). Esto es válido para las super. LAs dwarf miden ago más sobre todo si son hembras (depende de qué isla proceden, de la alimentación, etc.).


Un saludo,

Diego.
 

dredolar

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Más uinformación en inglés......


Diego.

The first dwarves we heard about were from the island of Jampea. These animals may be expected to grow to sizes of 9-12 feet (with some well fed specimens reaching even 15 feet), not a tiny snake by any means, but much smaller than their mainland brothers. Super dwarfs were originally imported by Bob Clark and Mike Wilbanks from an undisclosed island in the Greater Sundas (possibly near kayuadi), where for some evolutionary reason they become sexually mature at around 5 feet. With no locale to name them after, Superdwarf seemed an appropriate name. They have a fairly classic retic look as far as their patterns and colors, and the body style of a rat snake.

Today, many people buy and sell Dwarf Retics using the terms Kayuadi, Kalatoa and Superdwarf interchangeably. In our opinion, Superdwarf refers specifically to the stock Bob and Mike imported and their subsequent offspring. Kalatoas and Kayuadis may turn out to be just as small, but for now we prefer to differentiate between them.

As ')warf Morphs' become more and more prevalent, the original locality of each animal's ancestors is going to become less and less clear. Bob Clark's Super Dwarf Tigers (Pictured Below) are actually 50% Super Dwarf, 25% Jampea and 25% Mainland. They are some of the smallest Retics ever produced. To us, that is the point. If your goal is a very small Retic, and the breeder you're doing business with has a good reputation and pictures of his adults and their offspring that are very small, than who cares where they're from?

We are also breeding our Albinos into our Jampea stock. So far, the offspring have been smaller than 100% Jampea offspring that we've known about.

The truth is that Jampea and Kayuadi are both protected (no animals collected or exported), so we use these islands as a geographic reference point. The animals most likely come from some of the many small neighboring islands.
 
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