Denisebme
Honesty is NOT optional
Valley Dragons said:Okay. Obviously many people are repulsed by the sight of the silkback morph. But for crying out loud, people, make the effort to research this dragon before you judge the health, well-being, and genetics of this animal. The info to contact the breeders involved has been provided. I agree with what Mikey said above. I think it is really hard to carry on a decent debate when most of the people involved are forming opinions based on speculation alone.
Jamie
Some of us are making decisions based on the expressed traits of this animal. Thin, eyelid like skin was enough for me because of the danger to the animal during natural breeding.
I went to the Italian website and read everything they have on this. I do understand genetics, better than the average person anyway.
When people think of co-dominant traits they normally think of curly hair vs. Straight hair, or brown eyes vs. blue eyes, but genetic mutations or disorders can also be co-dominant and not so innocuous. Ask anyone who has Huntingtons disease running in their family or genetically linked cancer.
While I agree that people should be reacting to this based on information and not emotion, we never really get enough of that to make decisions based on scientific fact. In order to do that, we'd have to see genetic studies to see where the mutation is, and also have the information about what other issues can be caused by the mutation on that specific marker.
Genetics are a bit more complicated than just throwing out words like dominant or recessive gene traits, nor can you know enough to make an educated decision about this just by looking at clutch statistics on what this particular pairing of leatherbacks produced. There is one thing I know absolutely, this is exploitation of a genetic mutation. Is it harmless? We don't now the genetic implications, so we have to decide that by looking, and I would say that if these animals participate in normal breeding activity, their risk of injury is way higher than a normal animal because they do not have any built in protections.
I know the phrase "genetic engineering" sounds ugly, but its honest. The difference in what we often see in the animal world, and it doesn't matter if you're talking dogs or reptiles, is that there are no controls like their would be in a scientific experiment.
I'm one of those people who once I decided what kind of dog I wanted, I spent 8 months looking for a breeder. The reason I did that was to avoid the problems that have been bred into my specific dogs breed by back yard breeders and puppy mills who didn't care about the breed as long as they were making money. I ended up with a dog that had none of the genetic complications normally associated with the breed. I hate to say it, but it appears that people who really love bearded dragons should do the same thing.