Supercondas and anaconda, an anaconda bred to a normal gives a mix of anaconda and normal, ie no such thing as het for anaconda. Correct?
Correct. There is no het for Anaconda, primarily because an Anaconda is the het form of a Superconda. The Superconda is the homozygous phenotype of that particular gene which is a co-dominant trait.
Same with super to normal?
If you breed a Superconda to a Normal, you should get all Anacondas based again on the fact that Anacondas are the phenotypic het form of the Superconda. The gene behavior is the same as in recessive traits with the exception that there is a definite phenotype.
Superconda to anaconda gives all Superconda and anaconda?
That is currently the belief, that the Superconda gene should behave like a recessive gene in that a homo to a 100% het should yield a 50/50 mix of homos and hets, in this case, Supercondas and Anacondas. However, I am unaware of whether Brent's clutches have proven this out or not considering the fact that Supercondas are still quite rare.
If you are interested in some of the traits and markers of Supercondas/Anacondas, you might be interested in this thread that I started and elaborated
here.
These are dominant traits, right? Not co-dominance?
No, the Superconda/Anaconda traits are co-dominant. If they were dominant, then if you were to breed a Superconda to a normal, all you would get is Supercondas. Think of it this way, the normal wild type phenotype for all animals is generally the Dominant trait. If you breed a normal to an Albino, you get all normals. Why? Because the normal trait is dominant. A dominant gene is apparent when the base pair is mixed and the trait still appears as it would if it's base pair was the same. I wrote a complete breakdown of how this works in recessive genes based on Snow hognose
here.
Is there blending of the phenotypes or pretty much one or the other? Thank you again so much!
Again, I wrote an extensive article on this about concerning Codominance and Incomplete Dominance
here and if you want to go further down the rabbit hole on how I interpreted the blending of phenotypes, you can read about what some of our opinions are on the definitions of some of these topics, starting off with this
post I wrote and read the subsequent replies by CBH underneath. I don't think any of us really created enough complelling arguments to change each others stances too much, but it was an interesting debate all the same.
