hhmoore
tired & cranky shadow
Scott,
It may help to think of it this way: consider hypo to be the heterozygous form, and super to be the homozygous form. Then it behaves like a simple recessive gene (the only difference is that the "hets" are visually discernible from normal siblings). SO, if you breed a hypo to a normal - you get 50% hypo, 50% normal babies...if you breed a super to a normal - all of the babies will be hypo (which is why one would pay the extra money). hypo x hypo would yield 25% super, 50% hypo, 25% normal.
As for telling the difference between hypo and super hypo, there is no guaranteed method. There are some indicators which can lead to educated guesses, but they are not 100%.
It may help to think of it this way: consider hypo to be the heterozygous form, and super to be the homozygous form. Then it behaves like a simple recessive gene (the only difference is that the "hets" are visually discernible from normal siblings). SO, if you breed a hypo to a normal - you get 50% hypo, 50% normal babies...if you breed a super to a normal - all of the babies will be hypo (which is why one would pay the extra money). hypo x hypo would yield 25% super, 50% hypo, 25% normal.
As for telling the difference between hypo and super hypo, there is no guaranteed method. There are some indicators which can lead to educated guesses, but they are not 100%.
. At least since we both said the same thing, WE are more confident in our responses, lol.