starsevol
Cohabbing is cruelty...
I have 3 05s that are the result of an accidental breeding between an amel stripe and a bloodred. One is an amel stripe and the other 2 are orangey reddish stripes that hatched with grey heads. I am operating on the assumption that they are normal stripes het for bloodred even though the amel stripe mother *could* have been het for bloodred. I had posted about this last year and asked how you would tell the difference between a normal stripe and a bloodred stripe. Serpwidgets answered me and said I would have to do a test breeding back to a bloodred. He said if there were no normals in the clutch, then I indeed have a bloodred stripe. (BTW, thank you Chuck).
Today I started playing with the genetic calculator. Both of the normal stripes appear to be female so I went to the calculator and theoretically bred them back to their father. Since one of the 3 was an amel and all 3 were stripes it seems he is a bloodred het amel and het stripe. I entered the babies in as normal stripes het for bloodred and amel. I got.....
3/16 Normal het.Bloodred Stripe 66% poss.het. Amelanistic
3/16 Bloodred het.Stripe 66% poss.het. Amelanistic
1/16 Amelanistic het.Bloodred Stripe
3/16 Stripe het.Bloodred 66% poss.het. Amelanistic
1/16 Bloodred Amelanistic het.Stripe
3/16 Bloodred Stripe 66% poss.het. Amelanistic
1/16 Stripe Amelanistic het.Bloodred
1/16 Bloodred Stripe Amelanistic
If you look at the outcome, only the 3/16 normal babies would show belly checkers. Neither bloodreds or stripes show bellycheckers. And the 1/16 amel babies could occur even if the striped female was a bloodred het for amel. Is there any other way of knowing the difference between a normal stripe and a bloodred stripe?
I know statistically in an average sized clutch 1 or 2 normals with checkered bellies are bound to show up....but also statistically I never should have had all 3 eggs contain stripes. They were the only 3 that hatched.
Today I started playing with the genetic calculator. Both of the normal stripes appear to be female so I went to the calculator and theoretically bred them back to their father. Since one of the 3 was an amel and all 3 were stripes it seems he is a bloodred het amel and het stripe. I entered the babies in as normal stripes het for bloodred and amel. I got.....
3/16 Normal het.Bloodred Stripe 66% poss.het. Amelanistic
3/16 Bloodred het.Stripe 66% poss.het. Amelanistic
1/16 Amelanistic het.Bloodred Stripe
3/16 Stripe het.Bloodred 66% poss.het. Amelanistic
1/16 Bloodred Amelanistic het.Stripe
3/16 Bloodred Stripe 66% poss.het. Amelanistic
1/16 Stripe Amelanistic het.Bloodred
1/16 Bloodred Stripe Amelanistic
If you look at the outcome, only the 3/16 normal babies would show belly checkers. Neither bloodreds or stripes show bellycheckers. And the 1/16 amel babies could occur even if the striped female was a bloodred het for amel. Is there any other way of knowing the difference between a normal stripe and a bloodred stripe?
I know statistically in an average sized clutch 1 or 2 normals with checkered bellies are bound to show up....but also statistically I never should have had all 3 eggs contain stripes. They were the only 3 that hatched.