On the topic of bad side effects in morphs, did you all see that new albino ball or whatever that the guy hatched? The one that died from internal issues shortly after it was born?
Kind of blew my mind when in the sentence after saying it died, the guy said he was going to attempt pairing the same two parents to try and get it again... I'm sorry, what? You produced a fatal mutation, the ethical thing to do would be avoid reproducing it..
It also really points out how little these breeders actually know about what they're doing.. All they care about is what two snakes need to be put together to make them money. They don't even have a rudimentary knowledge of genetics, how they work, or how morphs are first produced, as he obviously thinks that the parents even had anything to do with the morph he produced. The cause of a morph is a random mutation in the DNA of one of the parent's gametes or in the zygote... And a random mutation is just that, random. It could happen at any time, no telling where, when, or the effect it will have. The likelihood of the exact same mutation happening twice at all is incredibly low, you might as well call it zero. The likelihood of it happening from the same two parents twice in a row..... Not a snowball's chance in hell.
Kind of blew my mind when in the sentence after saying it died, the guy said he was going to attempt pairing the same two parents to try and get it again... I'm sorry, what? You produced a fatal mutation, the ethical thing to do would be avoid reproducing it..
It also really points out how little these breeders actually know about what they're doing.. All they care about is what two snakes need to be put together to make them money. They don't even have a rudimentary knowledge of genetics, how they work, or how morphs are first produced, as he obviously thinks that the parents even had anything to do with the morph he produced. The cause of a morph is a random mutation in the DNA of one of the parent's gametes or in the zygote... And a random mutation is just that, random. It could happen at any time, no telling where, when, or the effect it will have. The likelihood of the exact same mutation happening twice at all is incredibly low, you might as well call it zero. The likelihood of it happening from the same two parents twice in a row..... Not a snowball's chance in hell.


