Breeding a possible super hypo het for albino to a hypo het for albino would give me 50% sunglows, 25% albinos and 25% possible super hypos het for albino, right? I am just giving an "average" percentege, I realize it may not be exact. My male is from a DH sunglow x DH sunglow breeding, making him a possible super DH sunglow. The only way I can PROVE it is to breed him to normal or recessive female. What would I get out of a litter from a super hypo het albino to an albino? The way I have proved supers is just breeding them to a normal, but I am just curious how I would prove him being a super with an albino female.
You are a little off on some of your numbers.
First of all you say your male is from a dbl het sunglow to a dbl het sunglow. This makes him a possible super hypo, and 66 percent het for albino, not guaranteed het albino.
If you breed a super hypo het albino to a hypo het albino you will get 25 % sunglow and 75 % hypos, 66% possible het for albino. Half of the litter would be supers.
If you breed a hypo het albino to a hypo het albino and neither is a super you could get out of a litter of 20, 3/4 hypos (this includes sunglows and hypos), and 1/4 normals (this includes albinos and normals). All hypos and normals would be 66% possible het for albino. 25% of the litter would be visual morph of sunglow or albino. 25% of all hypos, including sunglows would be supers.
If you breed a super hypo het albino to an albino, 50% of the litter would be sunglow and the other 50% would be hypos guaranteed het for albino. The only way a litter can be guaranteed het for albino is that one parents has to be an albino (albinos are-albino, sunglow, snow, or moonglow).
If you breed a hypo het albino that is not a super to an albino you would get, 25% sunglow, 25% albino, 25% hypo, and 25% normals. All babies that are not an albino would be guaranteed het for albino.
If your male proved to be not het for albino but proved to be a super hypo and you bred him to an albino, all babies would be dbl het sunglow. If you breed him to an albino and he proves to be not het for albino and not a super, you would get 50% hypos, and 50% normals, all het for albino, because one parent was albino.
Here is a breakdown of all babies in working with the albino gene, this refers to all babies that are not an albino of some kind,
het albino to visual albino breeding= guaranteed het albino babies
het albino to het albino breeding= 66% possible het albino babies
het albino to normal breeding= 50% possible het albino babies.
There is really no way to tell the hets from the non hets, you have to breed them to prove them out. And for the super hypos, you just have to breed as well to prove them out.
Hope this helps.