




marisa wrote:Being outdoors in the sun for long periods of time does not make a RES melanistic. It is often part of the aging process, and an "old" RES can indeed take on a blackened appearance. Melanism most often occurs in males and is thought to be related to hormones.
marisa wrote:Gwennie, I have no idea what you're disagreeing with me about. There was no mention in my post about how old a RES would be before he would become melanistic---I said it was part of the aging process (a RES that's 10 years old has done some aging), and it can vary between turtles, since it goes without saying that every one is different...

jozzep wrote:marisa wrote:Being outdoors in the sun for long periods of time does not make a RES melanistic. It is often part of the aging process, and an "old" RES can indeed take on a blackened appearance. Melanism most often occurs in males and is thought to be related to hormones.
I've read it's because of the sun.....I'm not a scientist or a turtle guru, i just repeat things that i read and learn. I agree hormones do their part since it happens to "most" males, but if the sun has nothing to do with it, how do you explain literally NO melanistic RES raised indoors? (if you know of any please direct to me)

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