raglanroad wrote:Because the knowledge you have of the genes of the fish is severely limited - approaching zippo - you are dealing with phenes. If it's not for restocking the wild, all you need to do, is a "Pierre Brichard", and produce nice lines of healthy zebras for fun and profit.
Get rid of those fish producing deformed and poor gainers, be they that for any reason, and away you go. At worst, sell them as single trophies.
And that's what this is really all about. You'll can linebreed the good ones to find the bad and weed it out thoroughly.
Then you'll have strong zebras that breed well in tanks, and get a good buck for a while, even when other breeders are selling lots of them.
good luck and have fun in the hobby.
Dave
Dave,
In what way is your knowledge of the genes of fish also not severely limited - approaching zippo?
A passing familiarity with some abstract molecular genetic terminology is not true knowledge.
Bar coding has it's uses but you are wrong to say, "All I need to do is bar code snip" Dave, all you can do is submit tissue sample to others who are doing that work. You aren't able to do it yourself.
All you know is that gene are to genotype as phenes are to phenotype. Each are merely names given to the collection of DNA base pairs that may form genes, some sequence of genes may form phenes and some sequence of phenes may form portions of phenotypes.
Most of these building block are not known by anyone, including molecular geneticists. This science is still in it's infancy. Mapping of the human genotype was an impressive technical accomplishment but has not yielded much of it's promise yet in improving the human condition.
No one is yet in the position to put any of the the abstract concepts of molecular genetics to practical use in this hobby to do their best to breed in captivity a few Hypancistrus species to help keep them in the fish hobby.
About the only useful results of the advances in molecular genetics has been to help clarify the evolutionary phylogenetic relationships between some groups of fish, no small achievement, to be sure.
Not you, not me nor anyone else is in a position to begin extrapolating how to correctly begin modest hobby breeding projects that would be equivalent of natural selection. The fish aren't extinct in nature yet and are not very likely to become so in our lifetimes; the populations are inclusive enough to prevent unnatural selection from occurring in the wild. Besides, even using the most basic of animal husbandry breeder selection techniques will be adequate for fish hobbyist needs for quite some time into the future.
Using the terminology as if you really know what you are talking about when even the scientists doing the work do not make such grandiose claims is obfuscation at best and mental masturbation at worst. A little knowledge is a dangerous thing and it is a double edged sword which cuts both ways. I don't know why you have such a drive to try to insult the intelligence of people on internet forums but I have known you long enough to know you enjoy it.
I know that there are much more intelligent and knowledgeable planetcatfish members who are much more knowledgeable than either you or me and especially so in the field of fish molecular genetics. There are some who are doing extensive work in the field of molecular phylogenetic relationships of fish. They would be the first to point out that species may be defined in a variety of ways and unless you can agree on what a species is then trying to breed them true to type is not possible in captivity. Species are really sets of traits some visible some not and there are no perfectly delineated boundaries where one ends and another begins. No one has reached a definition that fulfills every condition and is acceptable to all. Most of us have to use the simpler, I know one when I see one approach.
Avid Trout fly fisherman. ·´¯`·...¸><)))º>