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View Poll Results: Which Male should I breed her with?
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Re: Odd eye ASf!
 Originally Posted by Miko
This thread was really enlightening, I always thought that having one eye a different color from the other was genetic. Is it genetic in other species or did I read wrong? I thought it was genetic in humans sometimes.
I'm not sure about other animals. But in rats, ASFs, and mice, there is no specific gene that causes it. -Everything- about any animal can be said to be genetic, -but- there is no gene for odd-eye in these rodents like there is a gene for, say, Agouti (A/* in rats and mice).
I'll see what I can find about other animals.
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Re: Odd eye ASf!
 Originally Posted by Rhasputin
I'm not sure about other animals. But in rats, ASFs, and mice, there is no specific gene that causes it. -Everything- about any animal can be said to be genetic, -but- there is no gene for odd-eye in these rodents like there is a gene for, say, Agouti (A/* in rats and mice).
I'll see what I can find about other animals. 
EDIT:
Heterochromia in cats can be caused when the white spotting gene is present, and when in the womb, the white spotting gene prevents pigment (rarely) from forming on one eye. Usually the white spotting gene effects only the coat and skin, but it can sometimes block pigment from forming on one eye.
This sounds like what is happening on this ASF. Since they have a lot of modifiers making their white spotting extremely large, so i could imagine that the rate of odd-eye in high white ASFs (and rats and mice), is higher as it is in cats.
I hope that is more enlightening. It definitely helped my understanding of odd-eye a little more.
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Re: Odd eye ASf!
Thanks! I googled it and the word heterochromia came up a lot. I wish having two different eye colors was a morph. That would be so cool.
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BPnet Veteran
What I would do personally is put her with a male that has a lot of husky-like patterns. From my understanding from the little research I did and the selective breeding I did, it's based on coat color/pattern.
Odd-eyes: Not controlled by a single gene but in association with white spotting such as American Husky S/s and H(e)
I have proven this. I had gotten a huge colony of husky rex rats to breed for genetics. I produced several odd eyed rats from this colony. I do not believe odd eyed to be associated with the rex gene but I do believe it to be associated with the husky gene based off of my selective breeding and other breeders who have had the same experiences.
This, of course, is normal rats and not ASF's.
I would think that if you choose a male, that has a similar things going on as that of a husky rat, you will have a lot more of a chance to get odd eyed ASF's. I think my ratio was one odd eyed rat out of every 30+ babies from husky group
In addition, if you can remember the parents of this baby, that would be helpful. I would try and breed ASF's that seem to have more of a husky pattern to them and see what you get. I think that the husky pattern in rats holds the key to the odd eyed gene.
I might also breed dad to her to see what you would get (if they're not already too closely related)
AFRMA as well as some rat breeders I have worked with seem to think that if you breed an odd eyed to another odd eyed, your chances increase in getting more odd eyed. i have not done this personally so it's hearsay but I would definitely try that if you get more.
Fingers Crossed for you
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Registered User
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chimera_(genetics)
This is what I thought when I heard odd-eye. Basically happens when zygotes fuse, and unfortunately is not genetic (it's rare too, and may be slightly genetic only to the extend of offspring/zygotes tending towards it).
Who knows. Definitely update us when she has her first litter .
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heterochromia is when something has two different colored irises, it is not genetic in humans as far as I know. But it is super neat. It can happen between both eyes (so one eye one color, one eye another color) or partially in one eye. It when they are two distinct different colors, not when someone has a nevus (freckle) in the eye. Thats something else.
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Re: Odd eye ASf!
 Originally Posted by cinderbird
heterochromia is when something has two different colored irises, it is not genetic in humans as far as I know. But it is super neat. It can happen between both eyes (so one eye one color, one eye another color) or partially in one eye. It when they are two distinct different colors, not when someone has a nevus (freckle) in the eye. Thats something else.
Certain forms of it are genetic.
Certain types of odd-eye in mice are genetic and inheritable too. A woman that breeds splashed and tri colour mice in several different colours on the west coast, has one every few litters. I suspect the heterochromia in her lines, is genetic. 
I have odd-eyes in my mice every once in a while, but it's ruby and dark ruby, and never black and red.
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