It is most likely genetics, as environmental factors don't impact them like with other species (Iris oratoria comes to mind immediately). However I don't think anyone has selectively bred ghosts for long enough to have it be definitively be genetic, though environmental factors do not play a role in coloration.@MantisGirl13 What has to do with color then? Its not humidity like many say. I have raise all my ghost over the years the same temps and humidity and lighting and still get some green ones.
Thats what i am thinking as well. Maybe I should start a project for all green ghosts. Would probably take a few years and I would have to hatch all ooths the green female laid. Then keep all nymphs until they reach the instar where they change color.It is most likely genetics, as environmental factors don't impact them like with other species (Iris oratoria comes to mind immediately). However I don't think anyone has selectively bred ghosts for long enough to have it be definitively be genetic, though environmental factors do not play a role in coloration.
The humidity thing is false. One ghost ooth you get multi colors of ghosts so I doubt they are 2 different locals like OBT.Green ghost might be a different locality. For example the tan colour form in OBT's is a specific locality. Perhaps in the wild the 2 populations of ghosts are starting to diverge into different colour forms. I had heard that the higher the humidity, the greener the ghost, so someone should research that by keeping ghosts from the same ooths in different humidities.
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