T O P I C R E V I E W |
Gaz_1989 |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 14:47:42 What do the different terms mean in morph names?
Such as Het and Hypo?
Ive just seen a 'Classic Het Hypo Caramel Stripe' for sale.
And a 'Amber Het Stripe'
Where do the names come from?
Thanks
Gaz |
14 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
n/a |
Posted - 04/12/2009 : 17:27:57 Understanding genetics is easy if you have a brain the size of a planet.
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Gaz_1989 |
Posted - 03/12/2009 : 08:38:03 Thanks to all who have replied. Will read the article matty, cheers. |
matty18714 |
Posted - 02/12/2009 : 16:14:38 Oooops, have a look at this instead
http://www.theroyalpython.co.uk/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=187 |
Blackecho |
Posted - 02/12/2009 : 13:30:22 quote: Originally posted by matty18714
Rather than me explain it, have a read of this:
http://www.theroyalpython.co.uk/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=2731
Its based on royal morphs but follows the same idea.
The names of the morphs are named by their creators. Most morphs have quite long names, so we shorten them.
e.g.
Amel - Amelanistic Anery - Anerythristic Hypo - Hypomelanistic
Are you sure that was the one you meant to link to Matty? |
Gaz_1989 |
Posted - 02/12/2009 : 08:52:10 Thanks all, im gonna do some research into this, lol. Would love to fully understand the morphs and everything thats said above.
I was good at biology at school but this is going over my head! haha. |
eeji |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 22:23:42 recessive is what it says on the tin - the normal type overpowers it. The opposite of recessive is dominant, so eg amel:
amel is recessive to normal normal is dominant over amel |
hillzi |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 21:05:06 I was going to say recessive, but i didn't know what it meant. didnt wanna look a fool.
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eeji |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 20:12:28 each gene has 2 copies, one inherited from each parent. If different versions of a particular gene are inherited then its het (short for heterozygous) and if they're the same then its called homozygous
in recessive morphs only, you can't see hets because the normal wild gene is dominant over it so this is what you see. |
hiper2009 |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 18:51:52 Wow i never knew any of this |
matty18714 |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 18:19:36 When people say Het, they mean that it carries differant genes on one loci (a place on the chromosomes). If I have a normal het anery, it carries one normal gene and one anery gene, but as normal is dominant, it looks normal. |
n/a |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 17:55:07 quote: Originally posted by matty18714
Pretty much Tom. That is mostly right for corns because most corn morphs are reccesive.
However, a Het(erozygous) spider (royal python) is still a spider royal python because the spider gene is dominant over the normal gene.
Matty, in simple terms you can say that for practical purposes with corns, when people say "het" they means it's a recessive gene.
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matty18714 |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 16:34:23 Pretty much Tom. That is mostly right for corns because most corn morphs are reccesive.
However, a Het(erozygous) spider (royal python) is still a spider royal python because the spider gene is dominant over the normal gene. |
hillzi |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 16:24:36 and hets are that he has the ability to produce futher offspring of that 'het' but he is not visually that morph.
Say, caro het ghost would mean the snake is wild type corn, but his parent may have been ghost, so he can produce visually ghost corns and his het for ghost will be passed down too when/if he mates.
hope i got that right? |
matty18714 |
Posted - 01/12/2009 : 16:13:55 Rather than me explain it, have a read of this:
http://www.theroyalpython.co.uk/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=187
Its based on royal morphs but follows the same idea.
The names of the morphs are named by their creators. Most morphs have quite long names, so we shorten them.
e.g.
Amel - Amelanistic Anery - Anerythristic Hypo - Hypomelanistic |