» Site Navigation
1 members and 606 guests
Most users ever online was 47,180, 07-16-2025 at 05:30 PM.
» Today's Birthdays
» Stats
Members: 75,912
Threads: 249,115
Posts: 2,572,187
Top Poster: JLC (31,651)
Welcome to our newest member, coda
|
-
Registered User
Questions on Bumble bee & Bumble belly and BEL etc
I've got a few questions here: - (sorry for spelling and amount of questions lol)
1) A pastel x spider = bumble bee, does it matter wither or not it is a lemon pastel or jungle pastel?
2) When a yellow belly is bread to a bumble bee are the white sides (from the spider) visible, or what does the YB gene do to it?
3) Can you get a BP that is het for a dominant or co-dominant? (i don't understand the definition of reccesive)
4) Can you get a super form of any reccesive genes?
5) A mojave x mojave = a lucy, what makes a lucy with actual blue eyes?
Thanks in advanced.
-
-
 Originally Posted by Caelan
I've got a few questions here: - (sorry for spelling and amount of questions lol)
1) A pastel x spider = bumble bee, does it matter wither or not it is a lemon pastel or jungle pastel?
2) When a yellow belly is bread to a bumble bee are the white sides (from the spider) visible, or what does the YB gene do to it?
3) Can you get a BP that is het for a dominant or co-dominant? (i don't understand the definition of reccesive)
4) Can you get a super form of any reccesive genes?
5) A mojave x mojave = a lucy, what makes a lucy with actual blue eyes?
Thanks in advanced.
1. No
2. I believe it makes their sides much more yellow. As long as you breed a high quality bee to a high quality YB itll be easy to tell.
3. Recessive means that the hets look like normals and the recessive gene isnt visible. Or if its a morph het, itll only look like that morph. So a het ghost will look like a normal bp, but a pastel het ghost will look like a pastel but still carry the ghost gene, thus making it a pastel het ghost.
4. No. A ghost to a ghost will just produce all ghosts. No supers.
5. A super mojo has blue eyes.
-
-
1. Lemon vs jungle.. both are just blood lines of the same gene, so no it doesn't matter
2. My guess would be the spider
3. Yes and no... a spider or pastel are examples of the heterozygous (het) form of a dominate/co-dominate morph. Het simply means that 1 of the 2 genes are present. In dominate and co-dominate morphs there is a visible change vs a normal in the Het form. In Recessives there is not a visible change even though they are carrying 1 gene. For recessives it takes 2 genes (homozygous) for there to be a visible change. The homozygous form of dominate morphs look identical to the het form. The Homozygous form of co-dominate morphs looks different than normals and different than the het form (for example a pastel is a het, and a super pastel is a homo... but we generally do not use the het/homo terms for dominate and co-dominate morphs)
4. The visible recessive morph is equivalent of a super form in a co-dominate morph (both are homozygous)
5. Mojave x Mojave make a blue eyed lucy so does lesser x mojave, lesser x lesser, butter x mojave, butter x lesser, and butter x butter (ther are a few others as well but these are the most common)
~Aaron
0.1 Pastel 100% Het Clown Ball Python (Hestia)
1.0 Coastal/Jungle Carpet Python (Shagrath)
0.1 Dumeril's Boa (Nergal)
0.1 Bearded Dragon (Gaius)
1.0 Siberian Husky (Picard)
0.1 German Shepherd/Lab Mix (Jadzia)
-
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
|