• Hello!

    Either you have not registered on this site yet, or you are registered but have not logged in. In either case, you will not be able to use the full functionality of this site until you have registered, and then logged in after your registration has been approved.

    Registration is FREE, so please register so you can participate instead of remaining a lurker....

    Please be certain that the location field is correctly filled out when you register. All registrations that appear to be bogus will be rejected. Which means that if your location field does NOT match the actual location of your registration IP address, then your registration will be rejected.

    Sorry about the strictness of this requirement, but it is necessary to block spammers and scammers at the door as much as possible.

Bald is Beautiful...

Mrs InsaneOne

I See Snakes...
Or at least interesting in this case... I know there are hairless rats out there, and double rex rats that seem to be near bald, but I have never seen a hairless mouse before.

This little boy is the closest I've seen:
baldmouse4-18-07.jpg

baldmouse4-18-07(2).jpg

baldmouse4-18-07(3).jpg

baldmouse4-18-07(4).jpg


He came out of a PEW colony that I got from Stephen last year, and this is the first one I have noticed. We have had a few smaller fuzzies that appear to have rex-like curly hair, but nothing like this guy and he is about small hopper size and faster then snot - or at least he was when I was trying to take the pics.

Anyone else ever have anything like this guy pop up before? Whether from fancy (pet) mice or feeders?

I believe Stephen had something similar, but it had more fur and eventually the rest of the fur grew in. :shrugs:

Thanks,
Jenn
 
Please tell me you didn't make him a meal >_> that has got to be the most adorable mouse I've ever seen in my entire life....
 
Anyone else ever have anything like this guy pop up before? Whether from fancy (pet) mice or feeders?


I bred an adult bald to a normal mouse 2 years ago and 9 mice were produced that developed fur but lost it entirely until they were weanlings.
They where the smelliest little buggers I ever had! :puke01: And too ugly as adults!
But my corns had another opinion,I can say they "loved" them! :rolleyes:
Maybe it had to do something with their odor... :grin01:

I didn't make any more though...
 
Not fed off yet.. Were going to wait and see how he grows up.. Who knows, maybe we might have stumbled across the Rex genetics in our colony. Not sure how often Rex mice show up, or if this fellow is a Rex, but his hair does appear curly... :bang:

Regards... Tim of T and J
 
Green Bean said:
OMG that's cool! He looks so cute and naked! He needs a tiny sweater...lol...
Not here he doesn't... he'll be the only mouse that won't be sweating in his fur when summer truly gets here! lol...


He's definately not going to end up as food, unless some problem developes. I'm hoping to start a seperate colony with him as the male once he grows up. I've also stopped pulling pinkies from that colony to see if any others develop the same look.

Noe..gr said:
I bred an adult bald to a normal mouse 2 years ago and 9 mice were produced that developed fur but lost it entirely until they were weanlings.
They where the smelliest little buggers I ever had! :puke01: And too ugly as adults!
But my corns had another opinion,I can say they "loved" them! :rolleyes:
Maybe it had to do something with their odor... :grin01:

I didn't make any more though...
I don't think this guy started off with fur, but some of his siblings had less fur then normal and it looked wavey or curly at the time - almost rex-like as Tim mentioned. I fed them off before my oldest daughter brought this little boy to my attention though, so there's no telling.

I'm going to definately monitor the colony from now on though and we'll see what pops up! lol

Psst.. Nancy, if he stays bald and I get a colony going, I can send you one! or a trio.... He is kinda cute... not quite so wrinkled looking like the hairless rats!

Jenn
 
I think the hairless rats are adorable, too.

Wow, if you established a line of hairless mice, hognose keepers would go crazy. There is a school of thought that blames untimely deaths of hoggies on eating creatures with hair, when their natural diet is amphibians. Others say it doesn't matter. You often hear, though, when a young adult dies, that they can't live more than a couple years on mice, because of the hair. Then there will be a flurry of posts about how the hair passes through undigested, and here is someone's hoggy they've had since 1999, and here is another older one, but wait, they've only fed it fuzzies its whole life...

Anyway- he's just precious.

Nanci
 
How adorable! If you ever need to get rid of him and dont want to cull him, I will keep him as a pet for you :) Too cute!
 
No hairless mice here, but I have a hairless male ratthat I plan on breeding soon. I am hopinghe;s a double rex so I can get some blue dumbo rexes eventually.
 

Attachments

  • Picture 337.jpg
    Picture 337.jpg
    55 KB · Views: 71
Nanci said:
I think the hairless rats are adorable, too.

Wow, if you established a line of hairless mice, hognose keepers would go crazy. There is a school of thought that blames untimely deaths of hoggies on eating creatures with hair, when their natural diet is amphibians. Others say it doesn't matter. You often hear, though, when a young adult dies, that they can't live more than a couple years on mice, because of the hair. Then there will be a flurry of posts about how the hair passes through undigested, and here is someone's hoggy they've had since 1999, and here is another older one, but wait, they've only fed it fuzzies its whole life...

Anyway- he's just precious.

Nanci
Wow, I didn't know that about hognose... I guess I can still learn something new everyday! Interesting too... I mean it stands to reason that digestion difficulties can affect life expectancies. Even if this guy turns out to just have shorter - or less - hair, it might be benefical for the hognose that way. There was another poster on another forum that mentioned they'd heard of hairless mice, so I guess it is possible.

LindsayMarie said:
How adorable! If you ever need to get rid of him and dont want to cull him, I will keep him as a pet for you :) Too cute!
Corny Noob said:
If down the line there do happen to be more hairless prodgeny from this cutie I want to be on the list >_>

I'll keep you both in mind. :)

Flagg said:
No hairless mice here, but I have a hairless male rat that I plan on breeding soon. I am hoping he's a double rex so I can get some blue dumbo rexes eventually.
My hubby is the big rat fanatic here, he loves the dumbos, the hairless, and the rex/double-rexes. We had a double rex at one point, she was a realy sweety, but she had loads more hair then they boy you posted. But it was fairly thin and none at all on her shoulders and upper back. And her whiskers were as curly as can be!

I don't know enough about rodent genetics though, so it's just hit and miss as far as knowing what I have here! lol... aside from the pied mice that have the mega-colon issues, the ringed mice, and now these bald things. I think we may have stumbled onto some blue ringed mice too or grey - but I'll have to watch them as they grow to see.

*shakes head* All I ever bought the mice for was for feeders. Starting with PEWs and then picking up some brown and black fuzzy/hopperish things that I tricked a new mother into adopting. All because I had a ball python that prefered colored mice. Now I've got 10 colonies and well over 200 mice with apparently more keepers that will make yet another colony! :eek1:

That's after taking close to a hundred mice over to a fellow snake breeder so as to thin out the number of extra males I had twiddling thier tails and picking fights. I even gave him two of my younger breeding colonies to cut back, and I'm back up where I was before! I swear, these mice almost breed faster then my snakes eat.

Almost anyway... and once the hatchlings arrive, I know I'll be hard pressed to keep up during the summer months because the mice will slow down in the heat..

Oh, and it looks like I may have at least two siblings that will be just as hairless as the boy I posted. They are just about fuzzy size (don't know the age on them cause I don't track the litters because we have so many) and showing no signs of developing any peachfuzz as of yet.. I'll know for sure in about another week I think...

Jenn
 
Thx4thevenom said:
That IS adorable:D
Thank you!

Unfortunately he's no longer bald, though I've now found several more like him popping up in one of my other PEW colonies as well as in the one he came from. About a week, week and a half after I posted this thread he started growing in a thin layer of fuzz that eventually delveloped into a decent coat of fur.

Here's a pic of the fuzz as it comes in:
baldmouseNM.jpg


I'd put up a pic of the fully furred mouse, but I can no longer tell the difference between him and his brother. There is no longer a size difference between the two, though originally the bald guy was smaller. Also no difference in the thickness or length of the fur either, as I thought there might be as he matured.

*sigh* I guess it's just a fluke of some sort - causing his fur to grew in slower, unless he dropped fur at one point, but I haven't noticed that on any of them. But then again, my focus isn't the feeders - it's the snakes they feed. Maybe I'll see what happens when I give this guy his own colony - him and his brother both because I can't tell them apart.

Jenn
 
Nanci said:
Well, he was super cute while it lasted!!

Nanci
Definately... maybe once we have a real rat room or mouse house we will look at getting some true hairless mice for those snakes that seem to have trouble digesting the fur (we have one corn who used to yack every mouse that had fur until just recently, but he can't take extra fuzzy ones still without yacking. :( )


Jenn
 
Back
Top