JCCS
Well-known member
Study up on sperm retention.
Study up on sperm retention.
Which, you cannot prove a dual sired litter at this point or even Corals unless you keep back all visuals for six months or so because of it.
Unless the father last year was a Coral as well.
Albinos can be born super pink and colorful and it fades within a few months but the Coral trait begins to truly manifest within six months to a year.
Are you sure the killer pink albinos aren't sunglows? Also, it would be very rare for what you asked about to happen. Sperm retention is pretty rare as it is. Twice would be extremely rare.
Are you sure the killer pink albinos aren't sunglows? Also, it would be very rare for what you asked about to happen. Sperm retention is pretty rare as it is. Twice would be extremely rare.
She could, technically, but it would be more rare than regular sperm retention. Also, I saw enough sunglows and hypos where that is very unlikely.
You still won't KNOW. You'll suspect. The only way to prove that the coral albino male sired any of them would be to do DNA testing and only one person in the country is set up to do that to my knowledge. Until proven otherwise, you should go on the assumption that the sunglow fathered the entire litter.
The problem is, if you breed those holdbacks and represent the babies as being descended from that animal, you are likely misleading them. I'd contact Warren Booth if you really have to know that they're from that male.