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Inspired by the discussion generated by the striped Intergrade recently advertised on Herptrader, I thought an examination of the Morelia spilota complex was due.
There seems to be some confusion as to what constitutes a hybrid and exactly what an intergrade is.
I'll start with a great wrap by Dicco as an intro.
I agree with everything Dicco wrote here but would like to add that true intergrades are not just restricted to Port Macquarie of course. They're found over a fairly wide area of that part of the mid-north coast of NSW.
As long as people don't take names like this too literally.
Terms like this seem to work O.K for the Carpets in Queensland, like Proserpine, Atherton, Tully etc. Though it must be understood that these locality names are regional rather than specific.
I've heard that it's quite complex in the mid-north coast with apparently pure Diamonds and pure Carpets found in the same area along with intergrades. It seems that they seek out others of their kind to mate with retaining subspecies integrity.
It's been suggested that intergrades are a valid subspecies!
There seems to be some confusion as to what constitutes a hybrid and exactly what an intergrade is.
I'll start with a great wrap by Dicco as an intro.
A hybrid is a cross of two things, if you cross a Morelia bredli with a Morelia spilota it is a hybrid, if you cross a Morelia spilota spilota with a Morelia spilota mcdowelli it is still a hybrid. The fact it is a sub-species dose not effect whether or not it is a hybrid, it is not a Hybrid between two species, but it is still a Hybrid, just at a sub-species level.
The word intergrade is refers to something that has either gradually changed from one thing to another or where two things gradually come together.
A hybrid between two Pythons, whether it is a full species or sub-species hybrid, is not something that has happened gradually.
Even if two species or sub-species cross in the wild they are Hybrids, it dosen't matter how they are created, a Hybrid is a cross between two things, whether naturally or with the assistance of humans.
The Natural Intergarde Pythons found on the Northern Coast of NSW are not just where a Carpet Python, Morelia spilota mcdowelli and a Diamond Python, Morelia spilota spilota have met and hybridised, in fact their ranges are separated by the Natural Intergrade Pythons, which are called Port Mac Pythons sometimes to save the confusion.
The Intergrades on the North Coast are a seperate varient of Morelia spilota, as are all of the different varients of the species that gradually changed and adapted to it's environment like all other reptiles in Australia.
Most of the animals in Captivity are Hybrids being sold as Intergrades, and there are very few True Intergrade Pythons in Captivity. The true Port Mac(Intergarde) Pythons don't just look like a Diamond/Carpet Cross, they have their own unique traits as do all of our M. spilota forms.
I agree with everything Dicco wrote here but would like to add that true intergrades are not just restricted to Port Macquarie of course. They're found over a fairly wide area of that part of the mid-north coast of NSW.
As long as people don't take names like this too literally.
Terms like this seem to work O.K for the Carpets in Queensland, like Proserpine, Atherton, Tully etc. Though it must be understood that these locality names are regional rather than specific.
I've heard that it's quite complex in the mid-north coast with apparently pure Diamonds and pure Carpets found in the same area along with intergrades. It seems that they seek out others of their kind to mate with retaining subspecies integrity.
It's been suggested that intergrades are a valid subspecies!