Quote Originally Posted by ctrlfreq View Post
The reason is because it's not been shown to have a super form. If one ever appears, it will be re-classified.

The really interesting debate has yet to come up, which is how you know which gene a particular co-dominant morph resides on. There very well could be a number of double-co-dominant supers that simply cannot exist because the different "morphs" are just mutated alleles of the same gene, and thus cannot appear homozygous in the same animal together.
I just meant for the example on that website...why not use something that has been proved dominant
I mean, it doesn't matter really...

That is an interesting point...I'm all into thinking about all kinds of weird things that could happen with genetics
it's always easier though to make things happen when you're selectively breeding (clearly not what you're saying, but I mean things like crossover and other random chance kind of things)