
I breed bettas and know I can go to F9 before out-crossing but not sure what the guidelines are for zebras

I'm also a little worried as to how to source them with the current questionable Ebay auctions that pop up


From: http://www.xiphophorus.org/xgsc.htm#StarsIntroduction
Genetic stock centers are priceless resources in scientific research. Genetic experiments often require that special strains of genetically identical animals or plants be used to assure that results can be repeated in any laboratory and that differences are not due to environmental factors or to random variation found in almost any population of animals. Among vertebrates, genetically identical animals most often are produced by inbreeding for many generations between brothers and sisters; in each generation, about one-half of the genetic differences between the parents are lost. It comes as a surprise even to most scientists that one of the oldest and best defined groups of genetic strains consists of livebearing fishes of the genus Xiphophorus , the platyfishes and swordtails familiar to the tropical fish hobbyist.
In the 1920s, the American biologist Dr. Myron Gordon and German biologists Haussler and Kosswig independently discovered that hybrids of a particular strain of the platyfish Xiphophorus maculatus and the swordtail Xiphophorus helleri developed cancers virtually identical to malignant melanomas in man. They traced the origin of these tumors to pigment cells of a platyfish color pattern consisting of black spots on the dorsal fin. Genetic studies demonstrated that melanomas developed only in hybrids which had replaced both copies of a platyfish regulatory gene with swordtail forms which could not control proliferation of the platyfish pigment cells. This animal model was one of the first to prove that some cancers were inherited diseases; after 65 years, these fish still are used in cancer research in the United States, Germany, Canada, and Japan.
Dr. Gordon realized that to identify precisely the genes responsible for development of cancer, genetically identical platyfish and swordtails would be needed. Therefore, in 1939, he established the Xiphophorus Genetic Stock Center, housed at the American Museum of Natural History and the New York Aquarium until 1993, when transfer of the stock center to Texas State University | San Marcos in San Marcos was completed. During its 55+ years, the stock center has been directed by Dr. Gordon and Dr. Klaus D. Kallman in New York, and currently by Dr. Ronald Walter (Texas State University | San Marcos).
Several of the original genetic strains of platyfish and swordtails developed by Dr. Gordon in the 1930s still are available today; they are virtual genetic clones, the products in some cases of more than 80 generations of brother-to-sister matings.
I would then wonder if the zebra's range is not similarly limited, and thus if they too might not be "equipped" in a similar fashion.In addition many Mexican Livebearers have a very limited range, evolution has probably equipped them to deal with inbreeding.
However, the fact that snubnose is a genetic traits or just a result of the fry pressing his face against a square cave, have not been established.TwoTankAmin wrote:...And this brings me to another commonly discussed issue re zebras, subnoses. The other night I was thinking about plecos and current. ...
... And this made me wonder whether a snub nose might not actually be a genetic phenomena after all?