» Site Navigation
1 members and 1,682 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 76,073
Threads: 249,220
Posts: 2,572,812
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
|
-
Re: What female for me will eliminate odds of normals?
i have a male bumble bee too they are one of my favorites. a female pastel would be good to go with him and a good way to get super pastels. but of course if you're new you will also learn about breeding. as for you signature go to settings and on the left side there will be a edit signature link
1.0 albino
0.1 black pastel 66% het. albino
1.0 cinny
-
-
Registered User
Re: What female for me will eliminate odds of normals?
 Originally Posted by JaGv
i have a male bumble bee too they are one of my favorites. a female pastel would be good to go with him and a good way to get super pastels. but of course if you're new you will also learn about breeding. as for you signature go to settings and on the left side there will be a edit signature link
I love them too! When I JUST got into it when i was figuring out what my first snake would be (I've owned plenty of lizards but lived with a snake-feared mom) and I never really liked the look of normals, and as soon as saw that bumble I was blown away. So happy to have one! I just love the contrast and striping in them! I firstly considered a pastel/ super pastel, but I think seeing that I do want to get a very young female, I personally don't think the pastels are going to hold onto their value for another year or two and I'm trying to breed in three! So I'm looking at maybe a lesser or enchi or fire (and a double gene combo would be AWESOME if it's possible for me), as I like the looks of what they'll produce and what I could hold back. I'm still researching and curious to see the prices at the petaluma show on the 25th and then watch the prices throughout the year.
I'm not looking to be rich or anything, but I am looking to pop out exciting looking babies like my bumble bee and have a fun little breeding experience and I want to make sure my future hatchlings are going to be wanted and have a nice demand for them
@heylookitsjon- thanks for clearing up the genetics a bit, that makes sense. And yeah haha the supers aside from pastels are soo pricey...which is ok for me since I'm not joining with the supply for a good two years lol maybe by then they'll come down and if not I'll just make my own!!
foshi exotic serpeants- thanks for the input! That's interesting with the lesser x Russco that they weren't supers (I haven't heard of the Russcos)... I thought that at least combo x combo would eliminate the normal odds, but the genetic wizard shows me that even my bee x pastel will still give me 1/8 of normals! And even adding a double gene like lesser pastel, I'll still get like 1/16 normals. Is that right?
-
-
Re: What female for me will eliminate odds of normals?
 Originally Posted by chelseawhelsee
foshi exotic serpeants- thanks for the input! That's interesting with the lesser x Russco that they weren't supers (I haven't heard of the Russcos)... I thought that at least combo x combo would eliminate the normal odds, but the genetic wizard shows me that even my bee x pastel will still give me 1/8 of normals! And even adding a double gene like lesser pastel, I'll still get like 1/16 normals. Is that right?
Pretty much, kinda.
Without using a "super" (homozygous co-dom animal), you still have that 1/8 or 1/16 or even 1/128 chance, per egg, that you might get a normal. You won't necessarily get 1/8 normals.
If you're pairing morphs with 3+ genes, the likelihood that you will get a normal significantly decreases ... Though of course, you could still have miserable luck and hit on that 1/128 chance with your $15,000 breeding. 
You also have to consider what else you could potentially produce. If you bred your male bee to a super lesser BEL, probably the "best" (highest-gene animal, if that's what you're going for) you could produce would be a lesser pastel spider. If, however, you bred him to a female pastel lesser (which is actually a less expensive animal), the "best" you could produce would be a super pastel lesser spider. However, you also may get normals with that breeding.
-
-
Registered User
Re: What female for me will eliminate odds of normals?
You also have to consider what else you could potentially produce. If you bred your male bee to a super lesser BEL, probably the "best" (highest-gene animal, if that's what you're going for) you could produce would be a lesser pastel spider. If, however, you bred him to a female pastel lesser (which is actually a less expensive animal), the "best" you could produce would be a super pastel lesser spider. However, you also may get normals with that breeding.
Yeah I've noticed the pastel does help me out to add a pastel gene in my female cuz those are some nice odds I've been messing around with the generic wizard A LOT lol
@ohhwhataloser -that's true, I did see that thread. I guess I will stop assuming that and see what his outcome is, wether or not it's fatal though, the offspring would nno doubt have a doubled chance of more wobbles right?
@meowmeowkazoo - thanks for that wonderful break down! I definitely would drool to own a super fire! I haven't even looked at some of the super forms youve listed lol gotta go find those
-
-
Re: What female for me will eliminate odds of normals?
 Originally Posted by chelseawhelsee
@ohhwhataloser -that's true, I did see that thread. I guess I will stop assuming that and see what his outcome is, wether or not it's fatal though, the offspring would nno doubt have a doubled chance of more wobbles right?
found it http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...98#post1847606
"wobble" is not a separate gene. Spider is the wobble gene. So if it's spider, it has the potential to wobble. No one knows how it might act in homozygous form because there hasn't been a proven one. I dont see any reason currently why there would be more wobbles.
we need to stick to just saying facts are what we know, which isn't a whole lot. Theories are fine to discuss, but for some reason they keep becoming "fact".
-
The Following User Says Thank You to OhhWatALoser For This Useful Post:
-
Re: What female for me will eliminate odds of normals?
 Originally Posted by OhhWatALoser
found it http://ball-pythons.net/forums/showt...98#post1847606
"wobble" is not a separate gene. Spider is the wobble gene. So if it's spider, it has the potential to wobble. No one knows how it might act in homozygous form because there hasn't been a proven one. I dont see any reason currently why there would be more wobbles.
we need to stick to just saying facts are what we know, which isn't a whole lot. Theories are fine to discuss, but for some reason they keep becoming "fact".
... How in the heck did I miss that thread?! 
Also, "wobble" could be a separate gene from "spider" ... But if it is, it's so very tightly linked that there is no way, through simple breeding, to separate them. In goats, the gene for hornlessness (a good trait) is very tightly linked to a gene for hermaphroditism (a bad trait), so even though scientists know they are two separate genes, there's no practical way to separate them ..! (So, it's really pretty much just academic/semantics...)
Also, in response to the last few replies to this thread ... What the heck should we call those "heterozygous for two mutant gene" animals like mojave/lessers, Vanilla Creams, etc.? How about "hetero Super?" Since Super is a made up (unique to the snake world) term anyway, we could just make up a totally new term for these guys -- doesn't have to make a whole ton of sense ....
-
-
Re: What female for me will eliminate odds of normals?
 Originally Posted by Serpent_Nirvana
... How in the heck did I miss that thread?!
Also, "wobble" could be a separate gene from "spider" ... But if it is, it's so very tightly linked that there is no way, through simple breeding, to separate them. In goats, the gene for hornlessness (a good trait) is very tightly linked to a gene for hermaphroditism (a bad trait), so even though scientists know they are two separate genes, there's no practical way to separate them ..! (So, it's really pretty much just academic/semantics...)
Also, in response to the last few replies to this thread ... What the heck should we call those "heterozygous for two mutant gene" animals like mojave/lessers, Vanilla Creams, etc.? How about "hetero Super?" Since Super is a made up (unique to the snake world) term anyway, we could just make up a totally new term for these guys -- doesn't have to make a whole ton of sense ....
everyone calls them allelic
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|