i was interested by a topic in which someone suggested adding high grade bee shrimp to a tank of crystal red shrimp in order to breed higher grade crystal red shrimp. the topic claimed that although the first and second generation would probably result in bee shrimp, the third generation and onward would turn up crystal red shrimp
the person suggested putting something like 9 crystal reds to 1 bee
is there any validity to this claim? i was under the impression that out of 1000 bee shrimp only 3 crystal reds would be born. if the claim is true though, i would assume that the resulting higher-grade crystals would be somewhat hardier than other crystals due to a bigger gene pool. also, it sounds like a cheaper way to get higher-grade crystal reds.
any information on this topic would be appreciated
Crossing Bee shrimp with Red Crystal Shrimp
Moderator: Mustafa
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Crystal reds and bee shrimp follow simple mendelian genetics. Black is dominant and red is recessive. And yes, this topic has been discussed here before:
viewtopic.php?t=637&highlight=mendelian+genetics
viewtopic.php?t=637&highlight=mendelian+genetics
If you read Japanese, you can search this topic on .jp websites (or use the translation software). There are many excellent articles about this.
The main reason you bring in black/white BEE shrimps is the genetic. The main focus is not to IMPROVE the color or pattern (you should get good grade CRS to improve the color or the pattern - that is faster than using BEE shrimps). After CRS inbreeds several generations, the offsprings tend to become weaker (I breed angelfish too. Angelfish also have this type of problem. That is why angelfish breeders frequently bring un-related lines into their breeding stock too).
For CRS, BEE shrimps are used to correct this problem.
The main reason you bring in black/white BEE shrimps is the genetic. The main focus is not to IMPROVE the color or pattern (you should get good grade CRS to improve the color or the pattern - that is faster than using BEE shrimps). After CRS inbreeds several generations, the offsprings tend to become weaker (I breed angelfish too. Angelfish also have this type of problem. That is why angelfish breeders frequently bring un-related lines into their breeding stock too).
For CRS, BEE shrimps are used to correct this problem.