Wild Type
Wild type, often called normal, is the natural-looking form of the ball python, Python regius. It has a dark brown to black background with tan or gold side markings, rounded alien-head shapes, a dark head, and a pale belly. This pattern provides camouflage in the grasslands, savannas, and agricultural edges of West and Central Africa where the species occurs. In captivity, wild type animals are also the reference point for identifying morphs, although a normal-looking snake can still carry hidden recessive genes if its ancestry includes morph projects.
Normal ball pythons are kept and bred under the same standards as morph animals, and a well-started captive-bred individual can be a steady pet snake. They need a secure enclosure with hides, a warm retreat, a cooler side, and humidity high enough for complete sheds. Feeding is usually on mice or rats matched to body size. For buyers, temperament, health, feeding history, and captive-bred status matter more than the absence of a color mutation.
Colors: Albino, Axanthic, Banana, Banana Pied, Black-Eyed Leucistic, Black Pastel, Blue-Eyed Leucistic, Bumblebee, Butter, Calico, Cinnamon, Clown, Coral Glow, Desert Ghost, Enchi, Fire, Freeway, Genetic Stripe, Ghi, Ghost, Het Albino, Het Clown, Het Pied, Highway, High White, Hypo, Ivory, Killer Bee, Lavender Albino, Leopard, Lesser, Mahogany, Mojave, Monsoon, Normal, Orange Dream, Paradox, Pastel, Pastel Clown, Piebald, Pied, Pinstripe, Scaleless Head, Spider, Spotnose, Sunset, Super Pastel, Wild Type, Yellow Belly