Male vs Female genetics

CHAMKINGZ

New Member
Does the sire determine more color traits of the offspring than the female or will some look like both.
 
Males look like males and females look like females.
A male may end up possessing visual traits of the Dams father, but will not look like it's mother.

-Brad
 
What I meant was as far as the color traits go If I bred a blue bar yellow background male to a female whos sire was red bar which would the offspring follow.Will the offspring look like the females sire or the male that bred or will they be split. Were talking about a male offspring and wich parents genetics are more likely to carry on?
 
i dont know how you determine this concidering the varraying color displays within males from the same clutch can vary dramatically....can you explain? i have a brothers from same clutch one is many colors while the other is blue green and red and they are both ambilobe. this may be true for veilds but for panthers i think when your breed for specific coloring or barring you hope for it and they could be adults before you will ever know what their true coloration will be. imo
 
Does the males bloodline or the females bloodline play a bigger role in what the male offspring will look like or are they equal?
 
Males look like males and females look like females.
A male may end up possessing visual traits of the Dams father, but will not look like it's mother.

-Brad

so..you are saying that gender plays a factor in which genes are passed on? In humans (silly humans) it's a crapshoot--the female's chromosomes are as likely to manifest as the male's--but in chameleons the gender of the chromosome donor is a factor?

Note the question marks...I'm expressing what I got from your post and questioning it, not making an independent claim of fact.
 
so..you are saying that gender plays a factor in which genes are passed on? In humans (silly humans) it's a crapshoot--the female's chromosomes are as likely to manifest as the male's--but in chameleons the gender of the chromosome donor is a factor?

Note the question marks...I'm expressing what I got from your post and questioning it, not making an independent claim of fact.

That is not what he said at all.
 
Males look like males and females look like females.
A male may end up possessing visual traits of the Dams father, but will not look like it's mother.

A male won't inherit visual traits from his mother, but might inherit visual traits of her father. That would suggest that the gender of the animal determines which traits manifest, wouldn't it? If not, what is being said?
 
No, females will always have female colors so a male Will not get her female colors. However, she posseses color traits that can be seen in male siblings and possibly in the father, therefore the color that she will pass on will most likely be what her brothers or father look like. She still passes on color, just not her colors to a male offspring. Just as a males colors will not end up in a females physical color traits.

It's not the same, but it might help you understand. A human mother will not pass on her breast size to her son physically, but it will/can effect her son's daughters.
 
confusion

What I think Chamkingz is trying to say is that if you mate two panthers what is the probability that the male offspring will look like the sire or the females sire? Meaning that the female makes the egg/embryo and has 50 percent dna and the male sperms enters the embryo and has the other 50 percent dna. Which parents bloodlines are more likely to carry on to the offspring... (The female Sire's physical traits or the sire's physical trait) Which one is more likely? Or would the offspring be mixed 50/50?

Is this what you mean Chamkingz?
 
No, females will always have female colors so a male Will not get her female colors. However, she posseses color traits that can be seen in male siblings and possibly in the father, therefore the color that she will pass on will most likely be what her brothers or father look like. She still passes on color, just not her colors to a male offspring. Just as a males colors will not end up in a females physical color traits.

It's not the same, but it might help you understand. A human mother will not pass on her breast size to her son physically, but it will/can effect her son's daughters.

Good Pssh! :)
 
What I think Chamkingz is trying to say is that if you mate two panthers what is the probability that the male offspring will look like the sire or the females sire? Meaning that the female makes the egg/embryo and has 50 percent dna and the male sperms enters the embryo and has the other 50 percent dna. Which parents bloodlines are more likely to carry on to the offspring... (The female Sire's physical traits or the sire's physical trait) Which one is more likely? Or would the offspring be mixed 50/50?

Is this what you mean Chamkingz?

That is exactly what I was trying to say thanks KYchamgyuy
 
What I think Chamkingz is trying to say is that if you mate two panthers what is the probability that the male offspring will look like the sire or the females sire? Meaning that the female makes the egg/embryo and has 50 percent dna and the male sperms enters the embryo and has the other 50 percent dna. Which parents bloodlines are more likely to carry on to the offspring... (The female Sire's physical traits or the sire's physical trait) Which one is more likely? Or would the offspring be mixed 50/50?

Is this what you mean Chamkingz?

This is not widely studied/published as of yet...
 
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