Witblits
Witblits is a recessive, patternless morph of the central bearded dragon, Pogona vitticeps, first developed in captive breeding lines associated with South Africa. The name is often translated from Afrikaans as white lightning, but witblits dragons are not always white. The trait removes or greatly softens the usual bands, side bars, and dorsal markings, leaving a smooth-looking body in beige, tan, gray, orange, or cream. It is separate from zero, although the two are frequently discussed together because both reduce pattern.
Visual witblits dragons are managed like other bearded dragons, with stable heat gradients, UVB, and steady nutrition during juvenile growth. The main practical issue is identification and breeding. A true recessive witblits animal should have known parentage, while pale normal, hypo, or shedding dragons may only resemble the morph. Pairings with zero can produce animals labeled wero in many circles, so breeders and buyers benefit from clear naming rather than relying on a patternless appearance alone.
Colors: Citrus, Dunner, German Giant, Hypo, Hypo Trans, Leatherback, Leatherback Trans, Normal, Orange, Paradox, Red, Sandfire, Silkback, Tiger, Translucent, Wero, White, Wild Type, Witblits, Yellow, Zero