Vote for BP.Net for the 2013 Forum of the Year! Click here for more info.

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 612

0 members and 612 guests
No Members online
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,912
Threads: 249,117
Posts: 2,572,190
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, coda

couple of questions

Printable View

  • 03-24-2009, 09:45 PM
    Tazz27
    couple of questions
    What would the break down be if you breed a bumblebee and lesser? Second question is how much are Queenbees going for?

    Thanks for the help
  • 03-25-2009, 01:50 AM
    kc261
    Re: couple of questions
    bumblebee x lesser =

    queen bee
    lesser pastel
    lesser bee
    lesser
    bumblebee
    pastel
    spider
    normal

    Equal chances (1 in 8) for all of them.

    No idea on the current prices of queen bees.
  • 03-25-2009, 02:44 AM
    Nagini88
    Re: couple of questions
    I thought you couldnt get a bumblebee from breeding a bumble to another morph that didnt have pastel or spider into it? b/c that would be both the genetics coming from the father, right?
  • 03-25-2009, 06:39 AM
    nixer
    Re: couple of questions
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Nagini88 View Post
    I thought you couldnt get a bumblebee from breeding a bumble to another morph that didnt have pastel or spider into it? b/c that would be both the genetics coming from the father, right?

    you can get bees from bee to normal.
  • 03-25-2009, 10:30 AM
    kc261
    Re: couple of questions
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Nagini88 View Post
    I thought you couldnt get a bumblebee from breeding a bumble to another morph that didnt have pastel or spider into it? b/c that would be both the genetics coming from the father, right?

    It is both genetics coming from the same parent, however it is different than getting a super pastel from a super pastel x normal pairing.

    Genes come in pairs, and each animal has THOUSANDS of pairs of genes. When animals produce eggs or sperm, the gene pairs are divided in half, so each offspring gets 1 gene out of each pair from each parent, and the other in each pair comes from the other parent.

    Some people find it helpful to think of it as two rows of houses, one on each side of the street. A pair is the 2 houses that face each other. So the first pair is the 2 houses on the corners, then the next pair are the second 2 houses, etc. To get a super pastel, you have to have both houses in a pair be pastel genes, but only one of those 2 is passed on to offspring. However, lots of other genes (all the houses on the same side of the street) are also passed on. The spider gene is located in a different pair. So let's say a bumblebee has a pastel gene in the corner house, and a spider gene in the second house, both on the left side of the street. Both of those can be passed on to a single offspring. But since the super pastel has pastel genes in both corner houses, only one of those can be passed on to a single offspring.

    Now, just so you don't get confused, in that example, it might sound like the bumblebee will only have bumblebee offspring or normal offspring, since I said both of those genes are on the left side of the street. Actually, when eggs and sperm are being formed, there is a special process that somewhat randomizes the division of the gene pairs, so one time the spider & pastel gene might end up together, but the next they might be separated.
  • 03-26-2009, 01:11 AM
    Nagini88
    Re: couple of questions
    ah, ok that makes a lot more sense, thanks!
  • 03-26-2009, 01:16 PM
    771subliminal
    Re: couple of questions
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by kc261 View Post
    It is both genetics coming from the same parent, however it is different than getting a super pastel from a super pastel x normal pairing.

    Genes come in pairs, and each animal has THOUSANDS of pairs of genes. When animals produce eggs or sperm, the gene pairs are divided in half, so each offspring gets 1 gene out of each pair from each parent, and the other in each pair comes from the other parent.

    Some people find it helpful to think of it as two rows of houses, one on each side of the street. A pair is the 2 houses that face each other. So the first pair is the 2 houses on the corners, then the next pair are the second 2 houses, etc. To get a super pastel, you have to have both houses in a pair be pastel genes, but only one of those 2 is passed on to offspring. However, lots of other genes (all the houses on the same side of the street) are also passed on. The spider gene is located in a different pair. So let's say a bumblebee has a pastel gene in the corner house, and a spider gene in the second house, both on the left side of the street. Both of those can be passed on to a single offspring. But since the super pastel has pastel genes in both corner houses, only one of those can be passed on to a single offspring.

    Now, just so you don't get confused, in that example, it might sound like the bumblebee will only have bumblebee offspring or normal offspring, since I said both of those genes are on the left side of the street. Actually, when eggs and sperm are being formed, there is a special process that somewhat randomizes the division of the gene pairs, so one time the spider & pastel gene might end up together, but the next they might be separated.

    now thats a way to dumb it down for us
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1