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RE: Question about birth defects

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Posted by: kinyonga at Fri Aug 4 10:52:12 2006   [ Email Message ] [ Show All Posts by kinyonga ]  
   

You said..."Have heard alot about birth defects in hatchling geckos on the forums lately and was wondering if these tend to be genetic issues vs environmental (i.e. cold incubation temps, too most or too dry, etc)"...I have bred leos and several other species of geckos for years and have never had a birth defect.



As far as defects go...in all my years of hatching lizards...I have only had two defects show up.

I have had a water dragon born with a cleft palate...don't know what would have caused it. Cleft palates might be genetic. I had a chameleon (first one I ever hatched) born with a light bend in the spine...I'm sure it was from incubating at too high a temperature.



I also have been looking after a uromastyx that has part of its two back legs missing and has stunted growth....I'm reasonably sure that this was related to the incubation too.



You said..."It seems to me that given all the morphs and the degree of inbreeding that is done to enhance a particular strain that there may be tendencies for genetic defects to be passed along as well"...here's an article that talks about inbreeding (not about geckos) that has some interesting information in it...

http://www.petsmart.com/global/articles/article_detail.jsp?CONTENTcnt_id=10134198673267876&FOLDERfolder_id=9852723696503980&N=228



One more...

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?sec=health&res=9E0CEEDF1030F933A25752C1A964958260

"Inbreeding is thought to be harmful to a species for two reasons: first, because it allows hazardous recessive traits that are normally in the genetic background to come to the fore, resulting in birth defects, stillbirths and in some cases infertility; and second, because it leads to a genetically uniform population without the diversity to resist epidemics and environmental changes. But the San Diego scientists said their cheetahs almost never bore defective cubs, were perfectly fertile and had great variation in their immune systems."



And more again...

http://www.wolfweb.com.au/acd/birthdefects.htm

"POTENTIAL CAUSES OF BIRTH DFECTS: Heredity. Adverse chemical or physical agents, infections and inappropriate nutririon can all result in birth defects."



Here's one that shows a different result...

http://www.bigcatrescue.org/white_tigers.htm



Please be aware of the sources of the above sites when you decide their validity.



Hope this helps.


   

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