bristlenose fry albino and common
bristlenose fry albino and common
My pair of bristlenose have been breeding for several months now and each time I get between 20-30 fry. About half of the fry are albino and the others are brown. Is this common, Has anyone else had this happen. The pl*cos were sold to me as common bristlenose.
Rob L14,L27,L46,L81,L114,L204,L264,L52
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And it probably came about from someone keeping an albino with a "normal" bristlenose, getting a spawn of brown ones that went to some shop.
The albino's should breed true from your spawn. You should of course not breed them together, but if you were to get another albino from someone else, you could continue breeding the albino form (should you want to).
Your brown [1] ones are also carrying the albino gene, so they have a chance of breeding into albino if crossed with another "half-breed" albino.
[1] 25% of them will be non-albino carrying, the other 25% will be born albino, and the remaining 50% will carry the gene for albino but not showing it. Something like this: X is normal colouring gene, x is "albino" gene. Your parent's have Xx as the genes, which gives the following combinations:
XX = Normal colouring, not carrying albino gene.
Xx = Normal colouring, potential albino offspring.
xX = Normal colouring, potential albino offspring.
xx = Albino.
If you cross an Xx with an xx, you get three quarters of them albino (xx), and the other quarter Xx. If you cross XX with Xx, a quarter will be Xx and the other three quarters XX, none of them showing albino, but one quarter would have a chance of giving albino offspring with another albino.
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Mats
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Mats
The albino's should breed true from your spawn. You should of course not breed them together, but if you were to get another albino from someone else, you could continue breeding the albino form (should you want to).
Your brown [1] ones are also carrying the albino gene, so they have a chance of breeding into albino if crossed with another "half-breed" albino.
[1] 25% of them will be non-albino carrying, the other 25% will be born albino, and the remaining 50% will carry the gene for albino but not showing it. Something like this: X is normal colouring gene, x is "albino" gene. Your parent's have Xx as the genes, which gives the following combinations:
XX = Normal colouring, not carrying albino gene.
Xx = Normal colouring, potential albino offspring.
xX = Normal colouring, potential albino offspring.
xx = Albino.
If you cross an Xx with an xx, you get three quarters of them albino (xx), and the other quarter Xx. If you cross XX with Xx, a quarter will be Xx and the other three quarters XX, none of them showing albino, but one quarter would have a chance of giving albino offspring with another albino.
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Mats
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Mats