This brings me to the striped/jungle, what's recessive, what's dominant, etc debate. According to my own breedings since 2000, stripe and jungle are GENETIC and with my breedings are recessive, with jungle being dominant over stripe. I, however, can't explain why jungle is dominant over stripe. I just know that jungle X jungle yields jungles and stripe X stripe yield stripes, but stripe X jungle yields jungles or a mix. I also know this on the het level through breedings of my former male tremper albino to a jungle and a striped female. The albino het offpsring were jungles or stripes. Breedings of those offspring to each other resulted in normals, albinos, jungles, and 1 striped. The ratios were close to 9:3:3:1, which is the ratio one would expect if testing to see if a trait is genetic. Also, when I say jungle or stripe I'm also inferring that they have a either a striped or abnormally patterned tail. This isn't to say that you could have a partial stripe/jungle" with a normal tail and produce 100% striped or jungle offspring. Knowing this makes me wonder if the abberant body and tail are 2 separate traits, but maybe on the same chromosome. If this is the case, then when these chromosomes independently assort, both traits are expressed, but if crossing over occurs near those 2 traits, maybe one or the other gets expressed.