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Re: Double Sire Question.
Because supers don't produce any normal looking offspring.
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Registered User
Re: Double Sire Question.
ahh... now i see... hmm... good idea...
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New Member
A Blue Eyed Leucistic (Super Lesser, two lesser genes) with a normal will produce only Lesser single gene animals and zero Normal animals.
This means that all the Lessers from the clutch would be from the Super Lesser and the Normals from the clutch would be from the het. Albino.
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In this case you could not tell if your clutch was doubled aired or not.
I don't recommend pairing 2 males to a female unless they are 2 dom or co-dom males. If you want to do it with recessive you need to be smart about it using visual to start with no hets and pairing combos using the same recessive gene, for example Enchi Pied Male and Pastel Pied Male to Het Pied Female.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Stewart_Reptiles For This Useful Post:
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Re: Double Sire Question.
Would work better if the female was recessive then you could use 2 codom males on her.
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Re: Double Sire Question.
 Originally Posted by Velrys
Yes, you are almost correct.
There are not two sires per egg but two sires per clutch so You will get Offspring from male A and male B but no offspring with traits from A and B.
When I say "there are" I mean in the VERY RARE occurrence of two sires in a clutch which is the result of the animal using diapause. But this probably wont happen
Just have to add, a multi sired clutch is not rare at all. If you use multiple males there is a reasonable chance of the clutch having more than one sire.
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to aalomon For This Useful Post:
joebad976 (10-24-2014),Velrys (10-24-2014)
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Registered User
Re: Double Sire Question.
thanks for the great advice guys...
i got another question. would there be any differences with the results in breeding a male to a female (IN SHED) compared to breeding a male to a female (AFTER SHED) would that affect getting gravid and feeding?
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Re: Double Sire Question.
 Originally Posted by Joe Massey
thanks for the great advice guys...
i got another question. would there be any differences with the results in breeding a male to a female (IN SHED) compared to breeding a male to a female (AFTER SHED) would that affect getting gravid and feeding?
No changes....
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