xander;3763933; said:xanthic gars are more commly seen in lepisosteus species, leusism is far more commly found in atractosteus than lepisosteus.
E_americanus;3764182; said:um...are you speaking about the pet trade or nature? in the trade they are more seen in Atract only because that is what is usually bred for it, same with the old gold FL's, but those aren't around anymore.
in the wild the probability of it occurring should be relatively similar between the two genera (more of a population level issue than a genus-level) --
--solomon
xander;3764208; said:interesting, i thought i remember a few posts where richard was stating....
well here it is anyways.
http://forum.nanfa.org/index.php/topic/7904-albino-gars/
so are they equally occuring in the wild, or does what richard state on nanfa stand? i do remember seeing a pic of a leusistic longnose gar somewhere thou.
E_americanus;3764288; said:interesting thread...i never saw that discussion originally, nor did i know that forum was still running (can't seem to find it through normal channels).
anyway, if you follow the thread, you will see that there were eventually pics posted of a "leucistic" gar, and to me it looks like a Lepisosteus and not like a gator gar.
getting back to what richard said, he's right in that it's not commonly seen in Lep gars, but there are cases where it has been seen and does exist. like i said, these are population genetics issues in the wild, and in the trade they show up because they are farmed as such. the safe assumption is that these mutations could likely occur relatively equally (or have similar probability) between the genera because we just don't have enough data to make a well-based guess otherwise. not sure if that cleared things up or not--
--solomon
E_americanus;3764288; said:the safe assumption is that these mutations could likely occur relatively equally (or have similar probability) between the genera because we just don't have enough data to make a well-based guess otherwise.
--solomon