Is the amount of brown pigment in Pastels really hereditary?
I've always assumed that a Pastel's amount of yellow and brown was hereditary, i.e. a low brown / high yellow pastel would breed and create low brown / high yellow offspring but now I am questioning this. One of my very first BP morphs was a male Pastel that even as an adult was extremely high yellow with low brown coloring. When people saw him most asked if he was a Lemon Pastel which I told them that no, he was just an above average Pastel. I bred this high yellow Pastel to one of my normal girls and got 1.1 Pastels from the clutch. The male came out very bright yellow just like his dad and the female came darker yellowish/orange and now at 6 months she is already showing some brown on her back. To me this clutch seems to suggest that Pastel pigment is kind of like breeding Pieds, where a low white Pied can create high and low white Pied offspring.
What do you guys think? Is the amount of "Yellow vs Brown" in Pastels hereditary or random like the white in Pieds?
(and I'm talking about regular Pastels here, not NERD's Lemon Pastel which I believe is a separate proven genetic line)
Re: Is the amount of brown pigment in Pastels really hereditary?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
m00kfu
You need to remember that BOTH parents add to the genes of the offspring.
So what you are saying is the normal mom passed genetics that caused baby male Pastel to be brighter and his sister to have more brown?
Wouldn't that mean if I bred the high brown Pastel female to a normal it could produce high yellow / low brown babies based on what that normal dad passes?
Re: Is the amount of brown pigment in Pastels really hereditary?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Agent73
So what you are saying is the normal mom passed genetics that caused baby male Pastel to be brighter and his sister to have more brown?
Wouldn't that mean if I bred the high brown Pastel female to a normal it could produce high yellow / low brown babies based on what that normal dad passes?
Generally speaking yes.
I wouldn't expect a bright yellow baby out of a subpar pastel and a bright normal. but I would bet that some of them might be better looking than the original pastel. Its more selective breeding than just one gene being passed or not. multiple gene effect how a snake looks so its very variable.
but basically if you want a more yellow pastel, pair it with a more yellow looking normal, not a dark one. you have a better chance at producing what you want.
Re: Is the amount of brown pigment in Pastels really hereditary?
There's a significant difference between genetic breeding (KNOWING you're going to get a pastel or a pied or albino or whatever) and selective breeding for specific looks (ie: reduced pattern, bright pastels that hold their color, etc).
If you have a really bright yellow adult pastel that has held its color well, you increase your chances of throwing similar offspring, but there's no guarantees. It depends just as much on the other parent as well. If your pastel male covers a really light, high blushing normal female, your chances of producing exceptional pastels increases even more. If the female is a typical dark brown normal with little to no blushing, the babies are likely to inherit a similar look.
Never any guarantees with selective breeding...no specific percentages you can count on. But the better the stock, the better your chances of exceptional babies. BE PICKY!! :D