kirekameleon New Member Dec 29, 2011 #1 Here are my new jacksonii. I was told they are J. jacksonii (not xantholophus) but what is your opinion? Attachments IMG_20111229_120144.jpg 234.9 KB · Views: 144 IMG_20111229_175530.jpg 240.8 KB · Views: 135 IMG_20111229_180747.jpg 236.7 KB · Views: 147 IMG_20111229_180739.jpg 247.1 KB · Views: 127
Here are my new jacksonii. I was told they are J. jacksonii (not xantholophus) but what is your opinion?
kirekameleon New Member Dec 29, 2011 #4 coldbloodedAL said: They're Triceros jacksonii xantholophus. Click to expand... Thank you, this is why I asked as xantholophus is what they appeared to be. Is it the lack of yellow down the side on the male, and what is noticeable about the female that makes her xantholophus.
coldbloodedAL said: They're Triceros jacksonii xantholophus. Click to expand... Thank you, this is why I asked as xantholophus is what they appeared to be. Is it the lack of yellow down the side on the male, and what is noticeable about the female that makes her xantholophus.
kirekameleon New Member Dec 29, 2011 #7 coldbloodedAL said: Almost always a rostral horn on females. Click to expand... ...she just has a knob that sticks up, is this normal on a xantholophus.
coldbloodedAL said: Almost always a rostral horn on females. Click to expand... ...she just has a knob that sticks up, is this normal on a xantholophus.
Chase Chameleon Enthusiast Dec 29, 2011 #8 kirekameleon said: ...she just has a knob that sticks up, is this normal on a xantholophus. Click to expand... It is really neither common nor uncommon. You definately have aT. j. xantholophus pair. Females may have rostal processes while others may not
kirekameleon said: ...she just has a knob that sticks up, is this normal on a xantholophus. Click to expand... It is really neither common nor uncommon. You definately have aT. j. xantholophus pair. Females may have rostal processes while others may not