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genetics question

I think iv got this right, if your amel is het for anery you could breed with a anery and get snows.
Only if the anery is het for amel, and even then it wouldn't be a guaranteed thing. Each egg would have a 1 in 4 chance of being a snow.

Cornsnake124 said:
thanks. know any good things to breed with an amel?
A snow would be good to test if the amel is het anery. Anery is a common het. If the amel was het anery, you'd statistically get 50% snows and 50% amels het for anery. If the amel wasn't het anery, you'd get all amels het for anery. Of course, there are MANY other things that would be good to breed to an amel...
 
i have another question... What would happen if you crossed a male normal het amel to a reverse Okeetee?
 
You would get a mix of normals het amel, and amels. Some of the amels *might* be of RO type/quality.
 
In order to get any specific morphs in an F1 generation...

both mother and father must have at least one recessive allele of the morph you want (i.e. both parents must either be already expressing the trait you want, or be het for the trait you want)

(or course this isn't exactly true for ultramel like morphs, and tessera's, etc... but for the majority of the morphs it works). So you could breed the amel to an ultra and get 100% ultramels. Or breed amel to an ultramel and you'd get a mix of amel's and ultramel's.
 
That's because a Reverse Okeetee is a selectively-bred variant of Amel. For the purposes of morph calculators, it should be entered as Amel.
 
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