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Clearing up a question

E.Crassus

Note, its only a hobby
A question was posted recently on a UK forum: Is the lava gene co-dom with the amel gene? like with Ultra.
Up to now I was sure it wasnt but apparently this person got this info from here so was wondering if Dean or Serp or Rich or even Joe Pierce can clear this up, not just for my benefit but so I can report back my findings.
cheers
 
E.Crassus said:
A question was posted recently on a UK forum: Is the lava gene co-dom with the amel gene? like with Ultra.
Up to now I was sure it wasnt but apparently this person got this info from here so was wondering if Dean or Serp or Rich or even Joe Pierce can clear this up, not just for my benefit but so I can report back my findings.
cheers
No, lava is not co-dominant with amel at the amel locus. :)
 
Roy Munson said:
No, lava is not co-dominant with amel at the amel locus. :)
Ok thanks Dean, will report back the news lol.
Bit disappointed in a way, got my adult pair of lavamels and an adult female butter, 2 lots of lavamels would of been nice. :grin01:
 
From what I've heard, it is NOT co-dominant. What may have started that theory is that you can see the influence of lava when it is homozygous in amels (lavamel), which is not the case with regular hypo A. And it is totally different than what is happening with the ultramels. Ultra and amel are located at the same locus so they can be "combined". In other words, breed a homozygous ultra (uu) to a homozygous amel (aa), the offspring will be a combination of both (ua). Do the same with lava and amel (ll X aa) and you will get (LlAa), a normal that is het for lava and amel. For the Punnett square, you really need to write the parents as llAA for the lava and LLaa for the amel, as 2 sets of genes are at work.
 
E.Crassus said:
Ok thanks Dean, will report back the news lol.
Bit disappointed in a way, got my adult pair of lavamels and an adult female butter, 2 lots of lavamels would of been nice. :grin01:
Now that I see you use the word "lavamel", I can see where the confusion could have originated. I've seen that word used for corns that are homozygous for lava and amel. An ultramel is homozygous for neither ultra or amel.
 
sorry guys, it was me! I must have been drunk or tired (or both!) when i read it first time!
cheers for clearing it up, and thanks oli for chasing it up for me! :)
 
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