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

» Site Navigation

» Home
 > FAQ

» Online Users: 872

2 members and 870 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.

» Today's Birthdays

None

» Stats

Members: 75,903
Threads: 249,097
Posts: 2,572,069
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, wkeith67
Results 1 to 4 of 4
  1. #1
    Registered User
    Join Date
    03-25-2008
    Location
    NY
    Posts
    4
    Thanks
    0
    Thanked 0 Times in 0 Posts

    Question ruppel pastel genetics

    I have a female ruppel pastel that's 740 grams and want to breed her when she gains more weight my question is if i bred her to a normal or a het pied what should i expect? i will post of pics of her soon any help and suggestions would be appreciated

  2. #2
    BPnet Veteran PythonWallace's Avatar
    Join Date
    02-26-2007
    Location
    Woodridge, IL
    Posts
    2,967
    Thanks
    204
    Thanked 346 Times in 210 Posts
    Images: 23

    Re: ruppel pastel genetics

    Quote Originally Posted by ajakana View Post
    I have a female ruppel pastel that's 740 grams and want to breed her when she gains more weight my question is if i bred her to a normal or a het pied what should i expect? i will post of pics of her soon any help and suggestions would be appreciated
    Ruppel pastels have the same genetics of all the other pastel lines. If you bred her to a normal you would get 50% pastels and 50% normals, respectively. If you bred her to a het pied you would get 50% pastels and 50% normals, respectively, and all of them wouyld have a 50% chance of also being a het pied.

    I would not do either of those breedings. You always want the male to be the nicest/most expensive morph from the pairing, so if the female is a pastel, you want the male to be another co-dom, a homozygous recessive, or a combo. You have some time to get a male and raise him up to breeding weight, and I would get on it. The female Ruppel pastel likely cost 2x the price of a really nice male pastel, so there's no reason to breed her to a normal.

    If you breed her to a male het pied, all the babies will have a 50% shot of being het for pied, but you will have to hold back all the females for at least 2-3 years to breed them all back to the male to prove them out. With the price of het pieds these days, that project isn't worth it when you can get a male spider for a not very much money, and make bumble bees with her the first year. Or you could get a male pastel and get super pastels, or a mojave and go for pastaves, etc., etc. Forget about breeding the normal male to anything, and get a nice co-dom or combo male.
    What are these mojavas I keep hearing so much about?

    J. W. Exotics

    Reptile Incubators

  3. #3
    BPnet Veteran Hock3ymonk3y's Avatar
    Join Date
    12-31-2008
    Location
    Tampa, Florida
    Posts
    635
    Thanks
    175
    Thanked 98 Times in 78 Posts
    Images: 1

    Re: ruppel pastel genetics

    Quote Originally Posted by PythonWallace View Post
    Ruppel pastels have the same genetics of all the other pastel lines. If you bred her to a normal you would get 50% pastels and 50% normals, respectively. If you bred her to a het pied you would get 50% pastels and 50% normals, respectively, and all of them wouyld have a 50% chance of also being a het pied.

    I would not do either of those breedings. You always want the male to be the nicest/most expensive morph from the pairing, so if the female is a pastel, you want the male to be another co-dom, a homozygous recessive, or a combo. You have some time to get a male and raise him up to breeding weight, and I would get on it. The female Ruppel pastel likely cost 2x the price of a really nice male pastel, so there's no reason to breed her to a normal.

    If you breed her to a male het pied, all the babies will have a 50% shot of being het for pied, but you will have to hold back all the females for at least 2-3 years to breed them all back to the male to prove them out. With the price of het pieds these days, that project isn't worth it when you can get a male spider for a not very much money, and make bumble bees with her the first year. Or you could get a male pastel and get super pastels, or a mojave and go for pastaves, etc., etc. Forget about breeding the normal male to anything, and get a nice co-dom or combo male.
    Why do you want the male to always be the nicest?
    Kevin

    1.0 Normal Ball: Luther
    0.1 Pastel Ball
    1.0 Spider Ball


  4. #4
    BPnet Veteran PythonWallace's Avatar
    Join Date
    02-26-2007
    Location
    Woodridge, IL
    Posts
    2,967
    Thanks
    204
    Thanked 346 Times in 210 Posts
    Images: 23

    Re: ruppel pastel genetics

    Quote Originally Posted by Hock3ymonk3y View Post
    Why do you want the male to always be the nicest?
    Basically, males are, in general, less expensive than females, so it's more affordable to get a nicer male. Also, a male can breed with multiple females and produce multiple clutches each year, while a female can only lay one clutch a year, if that. So you want your most expensive purchase to be the best male you can afford, then you can add normal females, or cheaper morph females along the way, and the male will be there for all of them.

    If you had $1,600 and you wanted to start breeding to produce bees and killer bees, you could get a male bee for $900, and say 2 nice pastel females and 2 normal females. Come breeding time, you end up with 24 eggs, and you should average 4 killer bees, 4 bumble bees, 8 pastels, 4 spiders and 4 normals.

    Instead, say you get a female bee for $1,000, you can only get one pastel male to breed with her, so you will only get one clutch of say 6 eggs. You'd save about $400 at first, but you'd be lucky to even hatch a single killer bee each year, where in the above case you can count on hatching several each year, from the same initial investment.

    The more expensive the male, the better the outcome. If you had $10k, you can get a male champagne and 5 normal females, and you would likely hatch about 15 champagnes the first breeding year. For the same price, you can get a female champagne and a normal male, and maybe hatch 3-4. It just usually makes more sense to spend your initial money on the best male you can afford.
    What are these mojavas I keep hearing so much about?

    J. W. Exotics

    Reptile Incubators

  5. The Following User Says Thank You to PythonWallace For This Useful Post:

    Spartan452 (06-05-2012)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v4.2.1