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Thread: Kinked tail?

  1. #1
    BPnet Veteran DC Reptiles's Avatar
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    Kinked tail?

    Will this be carried on to the young or do you have to breed to find out?

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    Re: Kinked tail?

    I'm not positive myself. But a good rule of thumb is NEVER breed a kinked animal. Even if it is just a small kink on the tail. Just imagine breeding it and caring for the eggs for so long only to have the babies come out deformed.

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    BPnet Veteran DC Reptiles's Avatar
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    Re: Kinked tail?

    I dont have any but I keep seeing more and more pop up for sale and I was curious cause when I bred geckos if I ever had one that was in question it was mine until it died and it was just a pet.

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    BPnet Senior Member WingedWolfPsion's Avatar
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    Re: Kinked tail?

    I wouldn't breed any animal with a kink, except perhaps a caramel albino with a very minor one. Since kinking is attached the caramel albino gene anyhow, there's no logical reason to reject a caramel that has only a small one. It can't be bred out.
    Sometimes kinking is genetic rather than developmental, and you don't want to risk passing on a gene for it (aside from the aforementioned T+ albino gene).

    I'm actually looking forward to seeing if the Crider morph proves to look very similar in combos, so that the caramels can be largely retired altogether. I think the kinking is a more serious issue than the spider wobble, and certainly far more of an issue than the cinnamon duckbill.
    --Donna Fernstrom
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