patternless tremper albino mack snow/high yellow

H

Heraskeeper

Guest
im breeding my male patternless tremper albino mack snow, with my high yellow( giant baised on her current size) is it still possible to get more 100% patternless tremper albino mack snows? if so what are my changes of getting what? will they mix? will i get one or the other? im new to genetics so i need someone to lay it out for me if they dont mind.
 

Halley

Senior Member
Messages
4,670
Location
Missouri
with my high yellow( giant baised on her current size)

Technically speaking Giant isn’t necessarily a size, but a "gene". I have a few geckos that are technically giant size, but do not carry the giant "gene". However some people to believe the giant “gene” to just be a line breed trait. But I think most people would disagree if you called her a giant.

is it still possible to get more 100% patternless tremper albino mack snows? if so what are my changes of getting what? will they mix? will i get one or the other? im new to genetics so i need someone to lay it out for me if they dont mind.

If you breed a High Yellow to a Mack Snow Tremper Patternless you will get
50% Mack Snow, het Tremper, het Patternless
50% Normal, het Tremper, het Patternless
 
H

Heraskeeper

Guest
so there is no possibility of getting a hatchling like him?
 
H

Heraskeeper

Guest
50% Mack Snow, het Tremper, het Patternless


so hypotheticaly if i mated 2 geckos with these genetic make-ups what would i get then? (not suggesting imbredding im just trying to understand what the het's are for)
 
P

Paco

Guest
You don't need to back breed. There are plenty of breeders out there working wth the genetics you have. Look around and you should be able to find a female with the genetics you are looking for. A Snow dh Patternless and Tremper would work and be the least expensive. Otherwise try and find another Snow Albino Patternless.
 

jmlslayer

New Member
Messages
966
Location
Iceland
Why buy when he can make his own?
either why you wont get what you want till next season..... hatchling wise that is.
 
H

Heraskeeper

Guest
Time isn't the issue really just trying to figure out how it works. the first season i plan on incubating them as females but ive read some things say mack snows arent typical of other geckos in the sense that u cant incubate them at a certain tempature and expect females, is this true? ive also read that inbreeding patternless albinos can also leave u with infertile males? any truths to these myths? Thank you all for the replies.
 
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H

Heraskeeper

Guest
ok i think i have the hang of this. if i mate a M.S. .het patternless het tremper with the father then theres a 25% change i could get what want right? if its true mack snow is a co-dominant trait, might i perhaps even end up with a super snow p.t.a.? sorry for all the questions, i've just watched my female grow for a long time and now that breeding is in sight i'm getting very "antsy in the pantsy" with all the possibilities of genetic morphs!
 
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