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He's healthy, but I think you've been snookered. He appears to be of mixed-locale.
As to what critters could have conspired to produce this, I'm a bit far away to be able to offer insight, but clearly the milkman, or postman, snuck in on this one. I could say that it has more characteristics of a Nosy Be, but even then it is not clean. This animal would not rate classification as any distinct locale that I am aware of. It is clearly not pedigree Ambanja. The coloration of the head and forward torso would never pass the Ambanja stink test.
I agree 100% that every locale has its range of colors, like any bell curve. Unfortunately, hybrids abound in this business. Many are accidental, created by breeding mis-identified females (or deliberately mislabeled females). So it goes.
Beautiful cham. What great pictures!
I know for a fact that his lines are from Ambanja as the only stock in South Africa was smuggled from Ambanja. Here in S.A. we only get Ambanja on the market.
And "smugglers" are to be trusted?
Paul, with all due respect, you are relying on the "facts" that are assumptions at best, as you are having to take the word of others. Just the statement that you "only get Ambanja on the market" defies what many of us who are involved in the legal export know about how things come out of Madagascar. Not even the legal exporters, much less the "smugglers", are so guaranteed meticulous in what they send. If you get what you are supposed to 75% of the time you are to count your blessings.
Maybe here in the States enough serious folks in the market have been had enough times by mislabeled females, and even males now, to know that all too often the word of many sellers isn't worth the paper its written on.
So, despite all the assurances, the boat that only leaves the Ambanja dock, etc., you have a mixed locale critter. Very healthy, etc., but not what it was supposed to be.
Can you tell the difference between panther females?