(for example) if bloodred were to be co-dom...shouldn't a percentage of the offspring produced when bread to a normal be bloodred? not het for blood?
I'm not trying to harp here and I'm not trying to put the boa world down, just trying to inject some reality here. Quite honestly I'm hoping to explain why it is important to learn the different definitions and to understand why the way "co-dom" is used in the boa world is confusing, inaccurate, and is doing more harm than good while they are trying to teach people boa genetics and teach new people what to expect from crosses. Unfortunately the term has been fudged for so long that everyone just accepts the range of definitions as fact and they never bother to question the base knowledge (definitions of their terms) or look at what they are truely saying.
The problem here is that in the boa world, somehow codominant has come to mean phenotypes, geneotypes, and morphs of snakes. The word has nothing to do with any of these things. It kind of reminds me of the South Park word Marklar. Marklar can mean any word and is just inserted to mean many different things, some of which are mutually exclusive of each other. It gets very confusing. The word codominant is very simple and relates to the relationship of one allele (version of a specific gene) to another (different version of a specific gene).
Codominant is not a phenotype (i.e. this salmon boa when bred to a normal throws half codominants, just like dad).
Codominant is not a genotype (The results of that breeding are normals, super salmons, and codominants).
Codominant is a definition of how two genes relate to each other at the same locus (meaning they occupy the same space on the DNA chain). If at the "white" locus a "red" gene exists and is codominant, then WW will be "whites", RR will be "reds", and WR will be something different from white and red, and could be anything from nearly white to nearly red, falling in the "pink" category somewhere.
Codominance simply means that those genes' relationship to each other are not all or nothing. That's it. They both have some amount of effect (that amount of effect from each gene can be quite variable). When you have a codominant gene pair, your have
3 possible phenotypes (morph outcomes). Diffusion (bloodred) seems to fit into this category. There are 3 phenotypes. Normal (no diffusion gene), Bloodreds (both diffusion genes), and the heterozygous version which may look anything from darn near normal to darn near bloodred (het for diffusion) and is quite variable. What you DON'T get breeding a bloodred to a normal (non-het) is Bloodreds. This defines that the gene is NOT dominant. You also don't get a whole clutch of perfectly normal animals. The gene is NOT recessive. You get a whole clutch of animals with varying degrees (from slight to a lot) of diffusion of the pattern. These are the result of the het status of this codominant gene pair.
Dominant traits only have
2 phenotypes. They either are or aren't "blue" or "patternless" or whatever. Doesn't matter if the animal is het for the trait, or homozygous, they look the same. That is a dominant gene pair. Dominant traits are the ones that when bred to a totally normal animal will produce the morph in the first generation. Dominant traits also, though, show no difference when an animal carries 2 mutated genes or one. They look identical. One gene is enough to make the effect happen entirely. The best example of dominance that we are all familiar with is the "normal" gene when paired with any recessive trait. Normal is dominant to amel, it doesn't matter if the animal is het for amel or totally normal (not het amel)...the animal looks normal. The normal gene at the amel locus is
dominant.
The problem I've had in trying to converse with people in the boa world is that they don't seem to understand dominance vs. codominance. They will breed a new trait once and get some "blues" and some normals in the clutch and call the trait codominant. This is a premature assumption. What you do know from that pairing is that the trait isn't recessive...but that's it. Until you get a homozygous form and prove that out, you don't know the relationship of the gene Codominant vs. Dominant.
Ex: You breed this new blue to a normal and get half blues and half normals. You breed the blues together and get 3/4 blues and 1/4 normals. Chances are that gene is a Dominant gene (unless you were unlucky and no homozygous animals popped out). You breed all blues back to normals and some throw half blues, half normals. Some throw all blues that look just like the parents = the trait is Dominant to normal.
Or you breed the new blue to a normal and get half blues and half normals (just like the previous example). You breed the blues together and get 1/2 blues, 1/4 normals, and 1/4 greens. You've got a codominant trait. Breed the green to a normal to test...you get all blues (het form). Breed a green to a blue and get half blues, half greens. Then this trait is Codominant to normal.
Can you see why this quote makes no sense? Even if I fudge a little and use codominant as a genotype?
(for example) if bloodred were to be co-dom...shouldn't a percentage of the offspring produced when bread to a normal be bloodred? not het for blood?
If "bloodred" is codominant... ("bloodred" being the full diffused pattern trait) ...shouldn't some of the offspring be "bloodreds" when bred to a normal? NO. If "bloodred" is codominant, then when bred to a normal, all of the offspring should be something between "bloodred" and normal. "Bloodred" being the homozygous form.
...not het for blood? They should be het for blood because "bloodred" is the homozygous form. It has both "bloodred" genes.
The problem, I am guessing here, is seems you are using the boa logic of "X" gene and super "X", where the gene is named after the heterozygous version's phenotype. (Like Salmon, Tiger, etc.) These genes got named for the het version of a codominant gene, so when the homozygous version rolled around, those got called "Super Tigers", etc. Unfortunately the name of the gene got associated with the het version of a codominant gene pair before the homozygous version was ever created. That's the danger of getting a new codominant gene and naming it before you ever prove it out as dominant or codominant.
If that isn't the case, then I honestly can't follow your logic. :shrugs: I really feel bad for people getting into boas with all the hazy pseudogenetics thrown about. I know of one friend in particular that got ridiculed by the "higher ups" in the boa world for daring to read about genetics and then apply it to what they were seeing with the traits. He obviously did not know what he was talking about, right? He's new, what could he know? Yet, they couldn't answer his questions or defend their position, so they blustered and buffalo'd. It's sad, really. It would help if some of them could pick up a simple genetics primer and sit down for a bit, drop their preconceived notions and read with an open mind. I feel if they did that, a light may come on and it would elminate a lot of confusion. I know I'm a dreamer here and it won't happen, but it would be nice. People don't like to question the core of what they understand their knowledge base to be.