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Inter-breeding?
I plan to breed my pastel whenever he's ready, and eventually my goal is to make super pastels with him... he has really nice blushing for a regular pastel, so I imagine his supers will be fabulous. Since I love his coloring/blushing so much, I was thinking of breeding him back to a female offspring (I plan to mate him with my normal this winter). If I find a nice looking pastel girl in the clutch, should I hold her back for him? I've heard that inter-breeding isn't a good idea... I can understand the reasoning if it's a morph with genetic issues, like the spider or caramel. But is there any reason not to do this with a pastel? Should I buy him a nice looking un-related girl instead? TIA for any input, and here's my boy:

Lolo's Collection...
Ball Pythons: 0.4 Normals, 1.0 Pastel, 1.1 Mojaves, 1.0 Black Pastel, 2.0 Spiders, 0.1 Lesser, 1.0 Orange Ghost, 0.1 Honeybee
0.1 Spotted Python, 1.1 Stimson's Pythons, 1.0 Jungle Carpet Python
3.4 Corn Snakes, 1.1 Western Hognose Snakes, 1.2 cats, and 1.0 dog (47lb mutt)
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Registered User
Re: Inter-breeding?
What you are looking to do is called line breeding, and when done from time to time can bring out favorable traits.
It's done in livestock, pets you name it & it's done on WC BPs all the time to prove out traits. As long as you mostly out-breed (use unrelated animals), you can do an occasional line-breeding. Just keep detailed breeding records.
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Re: Inter-breeding?
Like Deb said Line breeding can be done to strengthen a specific trait you like in a gene or even to prove out certain things. I for one don't see a point to line breed beyond 1 generation it can be done multiple years in a row but no need to breed second generation offspring to original parents. I plan to do some line breeding with a few project I have. But its only to produce homozygous combos of a mutation like killer blasts or killer bees or killer spinners
When you've got 10,000 people trying to do the same thing, why would you want to be number 10,001? ~ Mark Cuban "for the discerning collector"
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Re: Inter-breeding?
I think you mean to say "inbreeding," not "inter-breeding" I think the term "interbreeding" is generally used to refer to hybridization between two different species or subspecies (ie, "Python curtus and Python brongersmai can interbreed to produce ugly babies.")
Inbreeding is generally used to refer to the breeding of an animal to a first degree relative, such as sire to daughter, dam to son, brother to sister.
Line breeding is a more general term that refers to the breeding of related stock. This could be very closely related (first degree), or could be cousin to cousin, grandfather to granddaughter, etc., or even more distant -- second cousins, etc..
The good thing about line breeding is that it tends to "fix" the good traits in a line -- for example, in chinchillas, we might line breed to fix the trait of having a nice coat into a given bloodline. Surprisingly, breeding together two totally unrelated animals with similar phenotypic traits may or may not produce consistent, good-looking offspring, but breeding together two animals that are somewhat related generally will.
The downside of inbreeding is that it decreases genetic diversity. The way I see it, there are three major problems that may arise from this:
1. "Fixing" of bad traits -- The bad traits (lousy hips, cherry eye, etc. -- listing off some purebred dog problems now) are going to get "fixed" in the bloodline along with the good, and can be REALLY hard to breed out.
2. Manifestation of recessive genetic disorders -- Just like some of our favorite phenotypic traits like pied and albino are recessive and can be brought out by breeding two gene carriers (hets), so too can crappy recessive diseases such as (going back to chinchillas now!) malocclusion (tooth problems). I have heard it argued that this may be viewed as a good thing, though, as it lets you know that the problem is in the bloodline and you can cull or possibly breed to correct it, whereas had you only outcrossed, the problem would have stayed silent. I don't know if I buy that argument or not.
3. Loss of genetic diversity in the immune system -- This is a HUGE problem in wild populations of endangered animals such as cheetahs, and my guess is that it may be a bigger problem in captive collections of animals than we know about. The whole reason sex evolved (most likely) was for genetic diversity -- not so much in those things we can see, but in the animals' immune systems. One animal may have immunity to a disease that another animal does not. So when you lose genetic diversity, if a disease comes along that no animal in the population has any immune tolerance to ... That population is screwed.
I hypothesize that this may explain some seemingly "random" die-offs in various collections and colonies of captive animals ... But that's just a theory.
In my opinion (again, my OPINION, there are LOTS of opinions on inbreeding and line breeding out there!) line breeding in small amounts is justifiable as long as the animals involved are healthy -- mainly if you're trying to really "fix" a trait in a certain bloodline, particularly in mammal breeds where there is really no other way to produce a consistent breed of animal. For the most part, I don't see a *huge* reason to do it with snakes -- I'd rather just trade my offspring for similar offspring to maintain a higher degree of genetic diversity.
Would you get monstrous, defective babies breeding him back to one of his daughters first-generation? No, probably not, but with a morph as common as the pastel, I don't really see a reason to risk it. That male is very nice and I agree, he has great blushing -- but I'll bet you can find a very nice, unrelated female that has a similar phenotype, and I would be somewhat surprised if that didn't produce nice offspring.
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Serpent_Nirvana For This Useful Post:
Danounet (08-18-2009),RhacHead (08-19-2009)
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