I'm not sure that Adam has seen this thread yet, but in his abscence I will make a few comments on stargazing.
We are working closely with a breeder in Holland who was unfortunate enough to get homozygous gazers produced this year, in exactly the way Natrix in his first post. We have F1 offspring from the original sire of this F2 generation, who are obviously now 50% poss het stargazer. Before this even cropped up, we were looking into importing gazers or het gazers from Connie Hurley in the US for testing purposes. Now it is more important than ever that we test our lines.
We plan to test every homozygous, heterozygous or poss het sunkissed snake in our collection before selling any snakes with this gene. Yes, this is only the start as by now the gene could be in any morph, but we have to start somewhere. And yes, this does involve culling entire clutches at hatch. It is not something I am looking forward to doing, but it must be done and we have the advantage over many people that I can perform this humanely. (This fact was one of the original stipulations put by Connie when we originally looked at importing these snakes).
The exception to the euthanasia is the homozygous gazers that we produce. These will be kept and raised to be used to test breed. Again this is something that I am not looking forward to, as we currently have 5 gazers given to us by our Dutch friend to raise, and it is quite disturbing to watch.
We will also keep any proved het animals for testing purposes.
Now obviously we will initially be using these animals for our own collection (we regard procorns in the UK and specialcorns in the Netherlands as one collection for this purpose as our animals are very interlinked). But in the future we will also be helping other people to test their animals. An important point to us is that ANY snake intended for testing breeding will be GIVEN AWAY or LOANED to those people who want them. WE WILL NOT SUPPORT A TRADE IN STARGAZER CORNS. We will also be in very close contact with anyone receiving one of these animals to ensure that these animals do not "vanish" into the general cornsnake population to spread the gene around agian.
There is already a waiting list of people who want to be involved in this project, and with the currently very limited stock we have for testing, it will take some time. We currently are looking to prioritise which snakes we test next year to clear (or not) as many F1 snakes as possible, as the proven het male has several years of breeding already under his belt.
I have 2 separate additional things that I personally wish to get out of this whole sorry mess. Firstly, given my profession, I want to support Connie in her research as to the exact mechanism of the disease inany way possible. Any gazers that die or cannot be used to breed will be sent to a specialist for full post mortem and detailed sampling.
Secondly I would like (and I'm not sure how the other people in the program will feel about this) to produce as soon as possible, a clutch of tested clean homozygous sunkissed corns that can again be given away to any breeders who wish to start sunkissed projects. I realise that we cannot ever say "100% this snake is not a carrier for stargazing", but we can get to 99%.
We do not do this for profit, or good name or any reason other than we love our snakes. Watching the stargazers is horrible. Some people may think it is cute that one of them sleeps all curled up in the normal way, but upside down. I do not. I do not believe the snake is suffering as it is obviously completely unaware it is doing something unusual. But that does not make it right.
We do not own any royal pythons, or any leos, so I am unable to comment on the neurological issues in those species.
I am sorry for the length of the post, but this is a subject about which my hisband and I are very passionate about.