Dark Jester;4536908; said:Not really. They are identical at a genetic level. The ones in my tank are exactly the same as the original ones found in that german pet store back in the 90's. That is what makes them so unique as a species. There are really only a handfull of creatures on the planet (that we know about) that reproduce via parthenogenesis.
Environmental variables can cause differences though. If one gets more food than another, it will grow faster. Assuming color is partly based on food, and 1 cray eats more of a type of food that promotes blue than another, that cray will show more blue. If one cray is attacked by a fish as a juvenile, it might show a greater distrust of fish than it's siblings. It might spend more time hiding.
If some guy decides to split them up and stick them all in jars with different water hardness, they might each show a different color.
You see the same kind of thing in Identical Twins in humans. They can't both experience exactly the same things at exactly the same times in their development, so their personalities can be very different. Genetically they are identical though.
REALLY, there really is genetic variation, even between individuals. the mechanism that duplicates dna is not perfect and often makes tiny mistakes. over time, those tiny mistakes can add up into significant variation.
there are tons of asexual organisms, most are primitive like bacteria but there are more advanced organisms too like plants, quite a few insects, marmokrebs and even komodo dragons (and many many more)! now komodos normally reproduce sexually BUT it has been proven that they can reproduce asexually as well and when they do, all the offspring are male (pretty interesting stuff)!!!
if you don't believe it, do a little googling.
