Quote Originally Posted by Caz View Post
I wonder if it's a similar gene to the Jag gene in carpets..
Both are said to have head 'wobble' or twisting issues in some snakes, 'Super' jags (leucistics) either die in the egg or shortly after hatching.

Has anyone here seen a 'super' spider dead in the egg? Was it leucistic?
No one has seen a super spider, or atleast admitting it, and it safe to say that a super spider if it exists, just looks like a normal spider.

and just so everyone knows all these are guesses... there is no public proof of any of this.
1. they die in the egg
2. they get reabsorbed
3. they just simply don't exist
4. they do exist

i did put sex linked down but, now i just thought about it, and yea sex linked doesn't work, because a male spider would make all its female offspring spiders... so i think we would notice that trend.

Aaron i would highly doubt they are out there in secret, people do bubblebee to bubblebee breedings in hopes of killer bees, plus im sure when spider gene came out 10 years ago people were doing spider x spider alot, and i think by now someone would of noticed something.

its not crazy to think there are other genes that don't happen, i mean jags in carpets, dwarfism in humans, it happens.

truth is there no real proof of any of it tho, I try to think in terms of statistics. and even that, I have no real numbers, so i guess its just thinking in terms of trends.