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leuc morphs/lines

14K views 24 replies 14 participants last post by  DartCO  
#1 ·
Opening this to chat on the different morphs Banded, fine spot..ETC some less bold..some bigger, also wanted to know of any more orange lines...wade in here and scholl the noob (me)! :D
 
#9 ·
So, slight hijack - I just got a trio of leucs, my first dart frogs. They are still young (5-6mo ow) but I think they may be 2.1 because there is one that is much more rotund than the other two.

Since these are all from the same brood, once they are older and I have a proven pair I should trade one for another frog of the same gender so that I'm not inbreeding, right? And are their green feet really the mark of a separate morph or is it just a variation of the standard morph? Breeding isn't really my goal, but when it starts happening I want to do it in a way that conforms to the proper husbandry standards.
 
#10 ·
to answer the first part of your question, yes you should always strive to separate siblings to avoid inbreeding, theoretically this should be done with all frogs. You just have to make sure to get the same line and/or morph which depends on the frog you're working with. I haven't done much reserarch on leucs(although the bandeds always catch my eye) so I cant answer the second part, but im sure the answer is somewhere here on dendroboard. try the search function, im sure you'll find something in regards. It's always good to see people striving for good husbandry practices. good luck with them!
 
#11 ·
Thanks RikRok,

I've been trying to find the answer on this question of whether the green footed variety is a separate morph or just a feature that occurs in some lines of the standard morph. It seems like it might be because I've found that in 1996 there was an import that was green footed. Many people don't seem to think they are a separate morph though. I've found pictures of a blue footed leucomela and they have very distinctly blue feet. Mine have noticeably green toes and feet and parts of their legs and body close to the legs are green as well but aren't as saturated as the blue legs. Further complicating this is the fact that some say that blue and green footed are the same morph but called differently in US vs Europe.

So when a new import makes a new morph available (like say the Guyana), is there a minimum number of individuals that are needed to create a viable line or can a new morph line be established with just two of the type? In other words, let's say someone brought in two Leucomelas that are red, or have entirely black heads or whatever, is that sufficient to start a new line or must there be some higher number of breeding pairs?
 
#18 ·
I have kept both fine spotted and chocolate leucs. In my experience the chocolate leucs are a bit more bold and a lot better in groups. With my fine spots I kept a 2.2 and ended up having to split them because one of the females was relentlessly wrestling the other one.

The chocolates are my favorite.
 

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