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ArborealMonster
11-05-14, 04:12 PM
Hello I have made list of knowing carpet python morphs but there can be probably more morphs but I don't find it. If you know some morphs that I dont have on list let me know about it :)
Arboreal Monsters: Carpet python morphs (http://arborealmonsters.blogspot.co.uk/2014/11/carpet-python-morphs.html)
I am hope than you enjoy it and I can say than in future carpet pythons for sure will have more morphs than ball pythons.

red ink
11-05-14, 04:39 PM
Morelia bredli isn't a carpet python, it's stand alone species just like Morelia viridis or Morelia carinata.

You're pic of a Tully jungle doesn't look like a Tully locale jungle... looks more like a Palmerston jungle.

Mikoh4792
11-05-14, 05:07 PM
Morelia bredli isn't a carpet python, it's stand alone species just like Morelia viridis or Morelia carinata.

You're pic of a Tully jungle doesn't look like a Tully locale jungle... looks more like a Palmerston jungle.

Looks like the tullies that Paul Harris from UKpythons is working with.

red ink
11-05-14, 10:50 PM
Looks like the tullies that Paul Harris from UKpythons is working with.

Not certain they are Tully's either (just my opinion - very difficult to prove locales in Aus let alone OS animals)... Tullys we have here look nothing like that, no Tully jungle here is under 5 foot either most are at the 6 foot mark.

Tullies tend to have "looser" patterning not so norrow bands of yellows and they tend to "gold out" with age.

If you look at pics of known Oz Palmerston JCPs and compare them to the pic provided on the site you'll see a closer resemblance than you would to Tully locale specimens.

But hey I could be totally wrong...

Mikoh4792
11-06-14, 02:32 AM
Not certain they are Tully's either (just my opinion - very difficult to prove locales in Aus let alone OS animals)... Tullys we have here look nothing like that, no Tully jungle here is under 5 foot either most are at the 6 foot mark.

Tullies tend to have "looser" patterning not so norrow bands of yellows and they tend to "gold out" with age.

If you look at pics of known Oz Palmerston JCPs and compare them to the pic provided on the site you'll see a closer resemblance than you would to Tully locale specimens.

But hey I could be totally wrong...

I'm going to guess you may know more about this since you live there but it's also possible that these "non tully-like" tullies are just the result of selective breeding.

ArborealMonster
11-06-14, 04:37 AM
I know that Morelia bredli isn't a the same species but the carpet python group is not a common name for species but for group of species. I write that bredli are different species than M. spilota.

I check more about this "Tully" thank you for point that out :)

red ink
11-06-14, 04:31 PM
I know that Morelia bredli isn't a the same species but the carpet python group is not a common name for species but for group of species. I write that bredli are different species than M. spilota.

I check more about this "Tully" thank you for point that out :)

If you want a pic of a known Tully locale JCP feel free to use this one...

http://i305.photobucket.com/albums/nn214/Red-Ink-Buldogs/Greyham/G15_zps77543b34.jpg (http://s305.photobucket.com/user/Red-Ink-Buldogs/media/Greyham/G15_zps77543b34.jpg.html)

franks
11-06-14, 06:45 PM
Nice red! Is that yours or a wild one?

red ink
11-06-14, 09:27 PM
Nice red! Is that yours or a wild one?

Mine... male I have at home.

ArborealMonster
11-06-14, 09:34 PM
Great thank you I will use your pic ^^

red ink
11-07-14, 03:33 AM
Great thank you I will use your pic ^^

I found who's animal the pic of "Palmerston" jungle belongs too... It's a breeder here in Australia and that animal is one of his Babinda locale jungles. Rare locale even for the
Australian hobbiest.