hhmoore
tired & cranky shadow
Well, in some species (including our own), there does seem to be a genetic predisposition toward twins (perhaps you have heard the comment "twins run in our family"); so it may not be as far fetched as it sounds. On the other hand, and in agreement with what you have said, why encourage an aberrancy that (in snakes, at least) produces smaller babies...especially if those babies have special needs that one is not prepared to meet. Inbreeding, or line breeding, to reproduce various color/pattern anomolies has become accepted as the norm...and is done quite irresponsibly by breeders at many levels (don't get me started on the far too prevalent habit of purchasing sibling pairs with the intent of breeding); but what is the sense of encouraging twinning? To get more babies out of a clutch? (only a benefit if you don't experience more losses as a result of the smaller babies) To show that there is a genetic tendency, and to encourage it? (but again, for what purpose...and what is the impact on the snakes?) To gain that 15 minutes of fame for being the one to have a whole clutch of twins?To sum that up, Deborah apparantly believed that twinning is the result of a genetic tendency rather than a result of the physical action involved in the fertilization process and wished to attempt to duplicate the production of neonates that were splitting the yolk contents between two developing offspring and the undersized runt failure to thrive snakes that resulted. I would call that position alone morally reprehensible and biologically irresponsible, it conflicts directly with my stance that anyone seeking to breed animals should make every effort to only contribute positively to the captive populations
Maybe it is narrow minded of me, but I don't see the benefit. Done in the interest of research, maybe...but rarely does a hobbyist breeder even conduct a meaningful study (involving sufficient sample size, proper controls, data collection, etc)

