T O P I C R E V I E W |
JackTheLad |
Posted - 28/10/2015 : 16:43:46 Sorry if this question has been answered somewhere else already (I'm sure it has but can't find a answer)
I have a male normal and a female spider who I intend to breed once they have reached sexual maturity.
What effect will the genes of the spider females parents have on the hatchlings? The spiders parents are bumblebee and calico. I've used gene wizards but these only match the genes of the spider to the normal. Do I have a 50/50 chance of normal/spider hatchlings or do the grandparents genes affect the hatchlings.
Thanks in advanced and sorry for newbie question |
3 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
JackTheLad |
Posted - 07/11/2015 : 19:05:04 Thanks for clearing that up for me! And thanks for my welcome to the forum.
All the best
Jack |
Kelfezond |
Posted - 02/11/2015 : 14:01:39 Spider is a dominant gene so yes you will have a 50/50 split, the grandparents would only have a chance of effecting the outcome if they were recessive morphs - which they aren't.
In terms of what effect the spider gene will pass on, only the spider babies will carry the head wobble neurological disorder - the normal babies will be fine despite their parents.
Any other questions let me know. |
Alves76 |
Posted - 02/11/2015 : 11:52:40 Welcome to the forum. I hope someone can answer your question, I'm afraid I can't! Check out the forum facebook page. You may get a better response there. |