Ultramel
An ultramel corn snake is the visual result of having one ultra allele and one amel allele at the same genetic locus. It sits between a normal or ultra-type corn and a full amelanistic corn, usually showing softened dark pigment, warm peach to orange color, and eyes that may appear ruby or reddish rather than the deep black of a wild type. The look can be subtle in some lines and much brighter in others, especially when combined with caramel, anery, motley, stripe, or selectively bred red lines.
Ultramel does not require special care beyond normal corn snake husbandry. Good enclosure security, a reliable heat gradient, clean water, and thawed mice remain the practical priorities. The main complication is genetic labeling: ultramel is an allelic combination, not simply another recessive color name. Pairings can produce ultra, ultramel, or amel offspring depending on the mate's alleles, so breeders need to record what each animal actually carries. When buying, comparison photos in natural light are useful because ultramel can be mistaken for hypo, light normal, or low-expression amel-related combinations. As pets, they should be judged first on health, feeding consistency, and calm handling rather than on a borderline shade of pigment.
Colors: Albino, Amel, Amelanistic, Anery, Anerythristic, Bloodred, Butter, Candy Cane, Caramel, Charcoal, Cinder, Creamsicle, Dilute, Fire, Ghost, Granite, Hypo, Lava, Lavender, Masque, Miami Phase, Motley, Normal, Okeetee, Opal, Palmetto, Pewter, Plasma, Reverse Okeetee, Scaleless, Snow, Stripe, Sunglow, Sunkissed, Tessera, Ultramel, Wild Type