burnedrose
New Member
So, I happened to be thumbing through a book at LLL the other day and say something interesting.
Evidently, with panthers, if you check under the chin, males will be gray-green or otherwise "colorless", while females will show vibrant reds. I checked out the sexing panthers thread and two other people mentioned this method as well.
Has anyone else heard of this? Or do they know of any other methods besides the hemipenal bulge indication? What about other species - veileds, with the tarsal spur, and horned chameleons are the obvious ones - but anyone have any other unusual methods for other species?
I'm asking because, in all honesty, male and female panthers look exactly the same at the base of the tail to me. I see nothing different.
Moderators, feel free to delete this if it's a repeat. I just didn't see much conversation about alternate sexing methods in the search engine nor in the sticky thread.
Evidently, with panthers, if you check under the chin, males will be gray-green or otherwise "colorless", while females will show vibrant reds. I checked out the sexing panthers thread and two other people mentioned this method as well.
Has anyone else heard of this? Or do they know of any other methods besides the hemipenal bulge indication? What about other species - veileds, with the tarsal spur, and horned chameleons are the obvious ones - but anyone have any other unusual methods for other species?
I'm asking because, in all honesty, male and female panthers look exactly the same at the base of the tail to me. I see nothing different.
Moderators, feel free to delete this if it's a repeat. I just didn't see much conversation about alternate sexing methods in the search engine nor in the sticky thread.