Posted August 25, 201014 yr Hi all i have been slowly getting the hang of budgie genetics and i am wondering what exactly the term split mean?? I see it on the forums all the time written as / but what does it mean?
August 26, 201014 yr hey their jack well split also seen as / refers to a male or female bird having either a sex linked gene or a recessive gene hidden in their make up example a blue opaline cock bird / albino so here you can see the bird is visually only a blue opaline but hidden in his make up is the fact that he is from albino breeding it could mean either peront was albino either mum or dad or it could just mean his own father was split albino and he was passed on that sex linked genetic or as in recessive birds the same thing apply's but the difference is with a recessive bird the genetic thats / lets say greywing then both birds would need to be split for the actual visual appearance of a greywing in a clutch where as with a sex linked / bird such as albino only the male can be split and doesnt need to be with a bird of that linkage to produce a vishial ,.... but in this case all the chicks that are visual will only ever be female how as with a rec / bird young that are visual in nest could turn our either cocks or hens i hope that makes scene here is the list of sexlinked birds the one where only the male can be / too and females can only ever be visual opaline albino or lutino lacewing cinnamon a list of rec variertys fallow rececive pied clear wing grey wing dilute crested dark eyed clear you also can get birds split for blue but never split to green then theirs the dominate colours that are only able to be produced if you have that variety these birds are not split they are dominant in breeding so half the clutch is usually that variety these are dom pieds spangles dutch pids also called clearflighted pieds yf birds but yf a bird can be split yf so im told but i still understand that differently :rip: their is most probably things ive missed but thats the general Edited August 26, 201014 yr by KAZ
August 26, 201014 yr Author so for example i have two birds with chicks at the moment and the father is a normal sky blue and the mum a DF white spangle. Does this mean that the chicks will be Sky blue/Spangle? or am i completely off?
August 26, 201014 yr so for example i have two birds with chicks at the moment and the father is a normal sky blue and the mum a DF white spangle. Does this mean that the chicks will be Sky blue/Spangle? or am i completely off? The chicks will be skyblue spangles not split for spangle as you cannot have a bird split for spangle. It is a dominant gene.
August 26, 201014 yr then theirs the dominate colours that are only able to be produced if you have that variety these birds are not split they are dominant in breeding so half the clutch is usually that variety these are dom pieds spangles dutch pids also called clearflighted pieds yf birds but yf a bird can be split yf so im told but i still understand that differently wacko.gif i did try explain not well mind you also a df spangle with a normal will give you all spangle chicks as its a double dose of the dominant gene as with df dom pied to normal df yf to normal its very complex but quiet easy to grasp
August 26, 201014 yr okay, if I had a visual opaline father and a normal mother, all the males would either be visual opaline or split opaline, and females visual opaline or not opaline at all, is that correct?
August 26, 201014 yr not quite,(males must have two genes of a sex linked gene to be visual (one from each parent) in the pair you brought up the male offspring will only be split for Opaline as they can't get another Opaline gene from the mother the female offspring part is correct.
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