shrimp incest?
Moderator: Mustafa
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- Tiny Shrimp
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Thu Apr 07, 2005 7:53 pm
- Location: NY
shrimp incest?
will the be any genetic defects after generations of incest breeding for shrimps?
If anything careful line breeding of your 10 to the googlepex generation will add to the increased incidence of the traits you are looking for. It's not really an issue with shrimp and crayfish as they have more redundant sequences in their DNA than we do.Mustafa wrote:I personally have not observed any so far despite the fact that some of my populations came from just a few surviving imported animals. In fact, my Red Cherry Shrimp are in their gazillionth generation right now and are all healthy and fit.
Mustafa
Of course "Incest is best!" works if your name is Riff Raff and your sister's name is Magenta.
http://www.rockymusic.org/covers/rhps-front.jpg
http://www.rockymusic.org/covers/rhps-front.jpg
"Sex" exists and drives people, shrimp and most other living things for a purpose! And that purpose is typically defeated by inbreeding. In aquarium fish, one typically sees considerable degeneration relative to wild caught in fish that have been captive bred for many generations.
However, speciation (->the process of forming new species) often begins when a small group -- sometimes possibly just one pregnant female -- is cut off from its parent population. So it is possible for a healthy population, and even a healthy species, to evolve from a very limited gene pool.
However, speciation (->the process of forming new species) often begins when a small group -- sometimes possibly just one pregnant female -- is cut off from its parent population. So it is possible for a healthy population, and even a healthy species, to evolve from a very limited gene pool.
Re: shrimp incest?
Hi all,
I somehow came across an article that states that for crystal red shrimps breed from the same parents have higher chances of degeneration of grading. And the degree of degeneration will increase as the shrimps inter breed with each other further down the line. So that's why some breeders introduce new CRS to the breeding tank to curb the degeneration of grade.
I wonder how true this is. Anyone have experiences to share? I'm still having my first batch of CRS shrimplets so I can't comment.
Colourtv
I somehow came across an article that states that for crystal red shrimps breed from the same parents have higher chances of degeneration of grading. And the degree of degeneration will increase as the shrimps inter breed with each other further down the line. So that's why some breeders introduce new CRS to the breeding tank to curb the degeneration of grade.
I wonder how true this is. Anyone have experiences to share? I'm still having my first batch of CRS shrimplets so I can't comment.

Colourtv
Re: shrimp incest?
i have no experience with this, but it is true that degeneration does occur with inbreeding. ever watch that episode of the x-files where genes were kept "within the family"? not very pleasant...So that's why some breeders introduce new CRS to the breeding tank to curb the degeneration of grade.
but back to the topic at hand, i believe breeders in Japan/Asia introduce what's called a diamond (a wild caught male bee shrimp, since all CRS are captive-bred to begin with) to maintain the purity of traits in the CRS line. that is, the diamond fertilizes eggs of the captive-bred CRS, and offspring that produce the desired traits are then selectively bred and so on and so forth. this practice minimizes the degeneration of the colors, etc.
Last edited by fugly on Wed Apr 20, 2005 11:55 am, edited 2 times in total.
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- Tiny Shrimp
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Thu Apr 07, 2005 7:53 pm
- Location: NY