diablohogs
Hogaphile
In my case, when I referred to "starting a new morph", I mainly meant selective breeding to enhance an existing trait, or the combination of mltiple morphs (ex. Garrick's Blazing Blizzard, Carrot-tails that have like 80% carrot-tail, ect)
yeah double mutations and selective breeding... thats true. i was refering to single mutations. like albino or hypo.
breeders that create new single allelle morphs either gather wild caught specimens themselves or purchase them from people who do. some get LUCKY and pop out with a new morph from seemingly normal hets sometimes many generations later and some find the morph in the wild (as i said the odds of finding an albino isnt likely but there are other morphs).
anything that is created from environmental causes is not a morph it is a defect.
You read my thread wrong easy on the replies buddy read before you have a temper tantrum.
im far from one of those.
Also, it is possible to create a morph...how do you think tangerines, snows, and red stripes came about?
ive already commented about that. i was pretty clear in listing all co dominant or recessive genetic traits i dont see why this keeps getting brought up.
Actually coming from the wild has NOTHING to do with producing new morphs...being wild or captive has nothing to do with it...ALL genetic abberancies (basically all alleles) besides normal come about from mutations...which have nothing to do with whether the parents are wild or captive or orange or patternless or white or purple...whatever...doesn't matter. A mutation is a fluke that produces a new allele and it can happen any time, anywhere. Even in line-bred traits...the individual genes that make up the trait first had to mutate at some point along the line to create the number of alleles that create the appearance. Just because a trait is first observed in the wild or in captivity has nothing to do with the trait itself.
uhm... name one.
name one trait that is a mutation that took place in captivity as a fluke. a situation where an albino or some other single allelle mutation appeared from nowhere and popped out of normal non heterozygous parents.
And I dont' believe that leopard geckos are at all an exception to the rule that inbreeding brings out undesireable traits.
once again, give me an example. a proven example in leopard geckos.
a lot of breeders will breed that animal, and then breed its offspring back to it, and then start inbreeding the animals to keep perpetuate the trait.
and that, my friend, is how recessive genes pop up from wild caught specimens or the introduction of wild blood to an exsisting line and than inbreeding the offspring back to thier parents.
the odds of breeding back an animal that is het to its mother or father (the carrier) when you never even knew one of the parents was a carrier to begin with is slim.
a het to normal breeding will give you 50% hets (on paper) than you have to breed that back to the parent (which would have to be the parent who was het to begin with) and if it was the carrier of the single recessive gene than from a het to het breeding you will get 25% what ever they are het for. thats where the luck comes in and where introducing wild stock to your already inbred/linebred stock can create a morph.
than again i hear plutonium works. just kidding...