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Bearded Dragon Genetics | The WITBLITS & ZERO Morph

By QB's Tails & Scales · more summaries from this channel

13 min video·en··6355 views

Summary

The video explains the characteristics, differences, and breeding considerations of zero, weo, and wilets bearded dragon morphs.

Key Points

  • Zero, weo, and wilets are bearded dragon morphs that lack pattern, with zeros also lacking color while wilets have color but no pattern. 
  • Zeros are called "zero" because they have no color or pattern; they can be hypo (light) or translucent (plasma) which shows a striking purple hue. 
  • Translucent zeros (formerly called plasma) are rare and were once named for their vivid purple appearance. 
  • Black bearded dragons do not exist naturally; only through breeding paradox morphs can an extremely dark dragon be achieved, and it remains exceptionally rare. 
  • Weos are similar to zeros but often display marbling and lack the shoulder‑pad patch that zeros have. 
  • The creator shares a personal breeding story where heterozygous weos produced three clutches but led to a disputed sale, highlighting market risks. 
  • Breeding considerations include using hypo, translucent, leatherback, and Dunner genes to affect back texture and scale appearance without adding pattern. 
  • For buyers seeking the whitest dragon, a weo is recommended; for a white dragon that may turn gray, a zero is better; for a colorful dragon without pattern, a wilets is ideal. 
  • Adding wilets to a zero results in a very white dragon, as wilets contribute color without pattern and the combination removes the shoulder pad. 
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Bearded Dragon Genetics | The WITBLITS & ZERO Morph

Bearded Dragon Genetics | The WITBLITS & ZERO Morph

The video explains the characteristics, differences, and breeding considerations of zero, weo, and wilets bearded dragon morphs.

Key Points

Zero, weo, and wilets are bearded dragon morphs that lack pattern, with zeros also lacking color while wilets have color but no pattern.
Zeros are called "zero" because they have no color or pattern; they can be hypo (light) or translucent (plasma) which shows a striking purple hue.
Translucent zeros (formerly called plasma) are rare and were once named for their vivid purple appearance.
Black bearded dragons do not exist naturally; only through breeding paradox morphs can an extremely dark dragon be achieved, and it remains exceptionally rare.
Weos are similar to zeros but often display marbling and lack the shoulder‑pad patch that zeros have.
The creator shares a personal breeding story where heterozygous weos produced three clutches but led to a disputed sale, highlighting market risks.
Breeding considerations include using hypo, translucent, leatherback, and Dunner genes to affect back texture and scale appearance without adding pattern.
For buyers seeking the whitest dragon, a weo is recommended; for a white dragon that may turn gray, a zero is better; for a colorful dragon without pattern, a wilets is ideal.
Adding wilets to a zero results in a very white dragon, as wilets contribute color without pattern and the combination removes the shoulder pad.
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