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View Full Version : New addition : 2015 Super granite checkered garter


Albert Clark
04-30-15, 12:39 PM
One of my 2014 0.1 pastel checkered garters 66% het for granite checkered produced this scrub on 4-24-15. Left in a enclosure with her father for shedding issue they bred and produced this guy! Mom is pictured here. She is only 10 months old! ;) She produced two scrubs but only this guy survived. The other was a pastel.

Minkness
04-30-15, 01:43 PM
Woah...total WANT!

Pogie
04-30-15, 02:02 PM
Love the markings on that first pic.

Albert Clark
04-30-15, 02:07 PM
Woah...total WANT!

Thanks Mink! This guy is a hold back for sure. ;)

Albert Clark
04-30-15, 02:08 PM
Love the markings on that first pic.

Thanks Pogie! :D

Minkness
04-30-15, 02:14 PM
Keep me informed on your super granites then! I know I want a garter in my collection some day and was thinking about the neon blue red sided but that super granite is amaaaaazing.

Albert Clark
04-30-15, 02:50 PM
Keep me informed on your super granites then! I know I want a garter in my collection some day and was thinking about the neon blue red sided but that super granite is amaaaaazing.

Cool, I will keep you posted on the project I will have for this guy. THANKS. :D Hit me with a pm when you can......

Obsidian_Dragon
05-04-15, 02:01 PM
Is it an actual super (hom) pastel, or just het, with granite?

Just being nosy, as I have a het pastel and was wondering if anyone really got far crossing the two.

Albert Clark
05-04-15, 07:33 PM
Is it an actual super (hom) pastel, or just het, with granite?

Just being nosy, as I have a het pastel and was wondering if anyone really got far crossing the two.

The mother of this visual granite baby's mother is pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered. Sired by her father who is a visual pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered. Original pair of pastel checkereds I purchased from Jeff Benfer as pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered. :D Jeff Benfer actually was the original breeder of the granite checkered x pastel checkered pairing.

jossh27
05-05-15, 07:23 PM
What makes it a "super" granite checkered? In no way am i intending on sounding like a **** im just curious to how snakes get that title


It is a very awesome looking snake by the way! i would love to have it :)

ARCH3R
05-05-15, 07:31 PM
Super is the same for all snake breeding. I won't pretend to know what granite is in garters so for arguments sake I'll assume it's recessive. By line breeding which he said he did he's bringing in two recessive parents which would generally show more distinct patterning than a het and recessive, not too mention the higher percentage of granites.

Albert Clark
05-05-15, 09:06 PM
I believe it's more of the pairing of pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered to the same genetics in both parents and having the offspring present as a visual of the hidden gene makes him a super. That is a imo. I certainly may stand corrected but that is what I thought. I will post some updated pics tomorrow to show his growth and look now.

ARCH3R
05-05-15, 10:23 PM
Yes definitely. Sorry, generalization on my part I'm not always the best at writing down explanations. You're pairing obviously does create the super form, I just can't spell out the gentetics w/o knowing if it's recessive, codom or incomplete dom and the chromosome pairing.

Irregardlessly (my favorite of all the made up words) that is one gorgeous snake! I do have a question about garters. Ever since I saw a picture I've wanted a san francisco garter, but who doesnt. I see ads for neon blue and red stripe garter snakes. Are those real? If they are real, then is it that locale or a different one?

ARCH3R
05-05-15, 10:55 PM
[QUOTE=ARCH3R;961226]Yes definitely. Sorry, generalization on my part I'm not always the best at writing down explanations. You're pairing obviously does create the super form, I just can't spell out the gentetics w/o knowing if it's recessive, codom or incomplete dom and the chromosome pairing.

Irregardlessly (my favorite of all the made up words) that is one gorgeous snake! I do have a question about garters. Ever since I saw a picture I've wanted a san francisco garter, but who doesnt. I see ads for neon blue and red stripe garter snakes. Are those a different locale? I thought san francisco garter was an untouchable dream like the indigos.

Machala2012
05-06-15, 06:10 AM
seems like a beautiful accident :P

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 06:48 AM
seems like a beautiful accident :P

Thanks! It really was unexpected.;)

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 06:56 AM
[QUOTE=ARCH3R;961226]Yes definitely. Sorry, generalization on my part I'm not always the best at writing down explanations. You're pairing obviously does create the super form, I just can't spell out the gentetics w/o knowing if it's recessive, codom or incomplete dom and the chromosome pairing.

Irregardlessly (my favorite of all the made up words) that is one gorgeous snake! I do have a question about garters. Ever since I saw a picture I've wanted a san francisco garter, but who doesnt. I see ads for neon blue and red stripe garter snakes. Are those a different locale? I thought san francisco garter was an untouchable dream like the indigos.

No! I thought you explained your view quite clearly and I understood where you were at with it. Like I said I certainly could be wrong in the way I explained it and maybe this female granite is just a granite het pastel. I really am not sure. I know I popped her yesterday as a female when I previously thought it was a male. Lol. :freakedout:

Aaron_S
05-06-15, 07:02 AM
The mother of this visual granite baby's mother is pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered. Sired by her father who is a visual pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered. Original pair of pastel checkereds I purchased from Jeff Benfer as pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered. :D Jeff Benfer actually was the original breeder of the granite checkered x pastel checkered pairing.

So let me understand this correctly.

The mother of this one you just had (congrats) is a pastel 66% het granite.

The father of this baby is also the father of the mother? Who also happens to be a pastel 66% het for granite?

If this is the case what was the original pairing to get the mother? I ask because as it stands to get the fathers offspring to be 66% the father would have to been bred to a 100% het female. And if the father produced a granite he would be considered 100% and thus the mother would be 50% and not 66%.

Now if the father was bred to a "normal" or another snake not carrying the granite gene then the babies would all be 33% het for granite and not 66%.

The good news in either case if this mother produced a granite then the odds were really in your favour :freakedout:

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 07:26 AM
So let me understand this correctly.

The mother of this one you just had (congrats) is a pastel 66% het granite.

The father of this baby is also the father of the mother? Who also happens to be a pastel 66% het for granite?

If this is the case what was the original pairing to get the mother? I ask because as it stands to get the fathers offspring to be 66% the father would have to been bred to a 100% het female. And if the father produced a granite he would be considered 100% and thus the mother would be 50% and not 66%.

Now if the father was bred to a "normal" or another snake not carrying the granite gene then the babies would all be 33% het for granite and not 66%
The good news in either case if this mother produced a granite then the odds were really in your favour :freakedout:

The original pair were produced in the Jeff Benfer project of pastel checkered x granite checkered. They are both pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered. This pair have only been bred to each other and the daughter from the original pair bred to her father and produced this granite checkered female hence super granite. There was another scrub that was stillborn but had the phenotype of a pastel checkered. No other bloodline in this pairing nor of the parents of the female that produced the granite. So the 33% is not a possibility.
Thanks for your take on it.

Obsidian_Dragon
05-06-15, 08:24 AM
Hmm. Does the granite mute the yellow of the pastel? Because the super pastels (sans granite) I've seen are more obviously yellow. Even the hets are, as babies.

ARCH3R, granite is only visible when homozygous. Pastel is...co-dom, sort of? Het babies are visually different from normals, in that they are far more yellow, but mature into the normal olive coloring. Homozygous or super pastels are visibly yellow as adults.

At least, that's my understanding of it.

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 08:37 AM
Hmm. Does the granite mute the yellow of the pastel? Because the super pastels (sans granite) I've seen are more obviously yellow. Even the hets are, as babies.

ARCH3R, granite is only visible when homozygous. Pastel is...co-dom, sort of? Het babies are visually different from normals, in that they are far more yellow, but mature into the normal olive coloring. Homozygous or super pastels are visibly yellow as adults.

At least, that's my understanding of it.

Well, thanks for that. This girl is a tanned color with the black granite hashes (as you can see). She does appear to be the same color as when she was born. I guess time will tell. Most of the granites I have seen are a off white color with black hashing unless they were albino granite checkereds who are yellow. :blink: :freakedout: Thanks.

Aaron_S
05-06-15, 08:51 AM
The original pair were produced in the Jeff Benfer project of pastel checkered x granite checkered. They are both pastel checkered 66% het for granite checkered. This pair have only been bred to each other and the daughter from the original pair bred to her father and produced this granite checkered female hence super granite. There was another scrub that was stillborn but had the phenotype of a pastel checkered. No other bloodline in this pairing nor of the parents of the female that produced the granite. So the 33% is not a possibility.
Thanks for your take on it.

I think I still may be confused.

But whatever, my questions don't matter. What matters is yo ugot a cool looking baby.

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 08:57 AM
Thanks for shedding some light on the genetics though.

Aaron_S
05-06-15, 09:51 AM
Thanks for shedding some light on the genetics though.

Np. I can do more but it might get more confusing for readers LOL.

ARCH3R
05-06-15, 12:32 PM
Obsidian- gotcha it's recessive and probably codom. Snake genetics are crazy aren't they? Mammalian traits are so much more visually identified. Multiple colors is codom, one color is incomplete, recessive or dominant but can easily be identified by the babies. With snakes it's a bit of a craps shoot at times. Look at the platinum gene on retics lol.

Obsidian_Dragon
05-06-15, 01:20 PM
Here's a super pastel (and in the background, a normal):
http://i.imgur.com/tAX0US5.jpg
Photo was from the kingsnake ad where I got my little guy, so the snakes and photo belong to Brad Chambers, not I.

Here's a baby het pastel:
http://40.media.tumblr.com/8757a1d2d8716af1d8b4b6cf72a47964/tumblr_nb92auy0ri1qdg59lo2_1280.jpg
This IS my snake, and my photo. ;)

~8 mos later you can kind of see how he's greened up a bit:
http://40.media.tumblr.com/c758f9e66c2fe4e741d71d3f83e98c97/tumblr_nlwb7yq05i1qdg59lo2_1280.jpg

ANYWAY--that's why I was asking if it was a super pastel for sure as well as granite, because I want to know what granite does to the yellow! If anything. I've kicked around the idea of breeding these guys now and again, and couldn't find much about the interactions of the two.

I'm fascinated by the pattern along the neck of your little girl, there. Casual googling doesn't show that on other granites.

Aaron_S
05-06-15, 01:29 PM
Okay if it's known as a "super pastel" then it usually denotes it's an incomplete dominant trait. The "pastel" version is technically the "het" of the super pastel.

Therefore, there cannot be a "het pastel" unless it's recessive and the "pastel" would simply be the morph and there would be no super version.

To make things more confusing you can consider the pastel "het for super pastel".

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 03:21 PM
This is the updated pic of the super granite. Look at the head markings and patterning along with the coloration. ;) pastel checkered 66% granite checkered x pastel checkered 66% granite checkered

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 03:24 PM
Here are pics of a pair of granites of a friend of mine. ;) granite checkered x granite checkered

Aaron_S
05-06-15, 03:39 PM
This is the updated pic of the super granite. Look at the head markings and patterning along with the coloration. ;) pastel checkered 66% granite checkered x pastel checkered 66% granite checkered

We need a lesson in genetics.

1. As stated earlier, it can't be "het" something and also have a "super form". It denotes there's a "regular form". So either they are hets or are granites.

2. You no longer have 66% het granites. You have 100% het granites. They have proven to be carrying the gene.

We use 66% or 50% when trying to identify what babies may be carrying what genetics in a litter/clutch. It means that's the LIKELIHOOD of them carrying the recessive gene.

How do we get 66%? Glad you asked.

When breeding a 100% het x 100% het (animals that look normal but carry the desired gene) you have this break down of babies:
25% granite
50% het granite
25% normal

Because hets and normals look the same there's no way to officially tell them apart until breeding occurs. So we call them 66% since you have a 2 in 3 chance of them carrying the granite gene.
Once they breed and reproduce babies that carry granite their moniker changes from possible het to "het".

If I can breed one granite checkered to just any checkered and get granites then it's an incomplete dominant gene and they no longer can be "66% het granite".

Does this make sense?

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 04:15 PM
That is understandable to me . Are you saying that the parent (sire) her father, is also no longer a 66% het for granite and he is 100% ? I understand the daughter being 100% . Is it both of them or just the dam?:shocked:

reptiledude987
05-06-15, 04:44 PM
We need a lesson in genetics.

1. As stated earlier, it can't be "het" something and also have a "super form". It denotes there's a "regular form". So either they are hets or are granites.

2. You no longer have 66% het granites. You have 100% het granites. They have proven to be carrying the gene.

We use 66% or 50% when trying to identify what babies may be carrying what genetics in a litter/clutch. It means that's the LIKELIHOOD of them carrying the recessive gene.

How do we get 66%? Glad you asked.

When breeding a 100% het x 100% het (animals that look normal but carry the desired gene) you have this break down of babies:
25% granite
50% het granite
25% normal

Because hets and normals look the same there's no way to officially tell them apart until breeding occurs. So we call them 66% since you have a 2 in 3 chance of them carrying the granite gene.
Once they breed and reproduce babies that carry granite their moniker changes from possible het to "het".

If I can breed one granite checkered to just any checkered and get granites then it's an incomplete dominant gene and they no longer can be "66% het granite".

Does this make sense?
Makes sense to me. So I imagine the same would apply to the hoggie I bought that was labeled as a 66% albino. The albino gene would either be 100% or 0% once proved out by breeding.

Aaron_S
05-06-15, 05:06 PM
That is understandable to me . Are you saying that the parent (sire) her father, is also no longer a 66% het for granite and he is 100% ? I understand the daughter being 100% . Is it both of them or just the dam?:shocked:

Since with recessive both parents need to carry the gene it would mean both have proven! So both would be 100% het. Which is awesome for you!

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 05:11 PM
Since with recessive both parents need to carry the gene it would mean both have proven! So both would be 100% het. Which is awesome for you!

OK. now for genetics 102... Thanks. :blink:

Pareeeee
05-06-15, 05:22 PM
Stunning snakes!!

Albert Clark
05-06-15, 05:29 PM
Stunning snakes!!

Thank you. I am happy to start this granite checkered garter project. ;)