hownowbrowncow
FurBaby Slave
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2013
- Messages
- 113
Thank you for proving my point
Luke does NOT have any TOV Ranch animals in his herd and never has. I just wanted to make sure that that is known.
They are, don't know why there are two discussions going on here.I thought the RW and the fading whites that TOV ranch had were different.
Glad to see you are still around, and hello!Hello to anyone who remembers me...it's been a long time.
These lines are all over. It just takes so long for them to start fading they are incredibly difficult to trace. I think I mentioned in another thread that Ronda wholesaled a bunch of Sapphire v/c's, Blue Diamonds and Violet s/c's before she realized they were a unique color. She probably wholesaled some fading whites too. When you buy out a herd you never really know what is in it and she purchased dozens of herds. The first thing you do is wholesale all of the males you don't need and that puts a lot of nice animals into the pet market... and sometimes some unique colors as well.I have a neighbor who got a fading white at petco so one of their distributors has it in their lines.
Jeff, I know that you are good with numbers and with genetics, so I would like to take a moment to ask you a couple questions regarding this if I may.
You say that it is most likely they are the same mutation, and obviously I agree with that.
Now with regards to the rest of your information, with all of the very, very many loci available, and the many, many proteins available, what are the numerical chances, I understand you probably don't have an exact number but an estimate if you will, that two different mutations could occupy the same loci and together in their hetero state produce a mutation color AND it look identical to the parents, who of course just happen to look the same anyway.
And does this happen with any other mutation known in chinchillas? In other species?
While I understand it IS possible, what is the probability? It is possible that I am related to a saber tooth tiger in some genetic way, but the probability... points to being not likely. As I said earlier if we were going to require extensive "nit picking" about genetics before labeling simple expressed colors, we would have probably over 100 categories of standards, who all look identical. Sometimes it becomes the difference between scientifically speaking, and what "works" and can be seen and understood without testing every animal.
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