Coastal-Birds wrote:Okay I think I have finally got my head around this lol. It is still spinning.
You are not the only one
So is recessive ino and NSL ino the same thing?
Yes, it is the same mutation.
Can you put a NSL cleartail (light ring) with a green/cleartail. My head is not processing this.
Let's process: you will remark that I will only work on supositions based on what has been said here:
1. Let's consider NSLino and cleartail as different alleles of the same locus (it is probably the case from what Jay says).
2. Let's consider that light phenotypic cleartail are heterozygous cleartail-NSLino. This is to be proven since it seems that there are heterozygous birds with a dark colouring but may be it is just another example of variable expresion in an incomplete dominant mutation (cleartail), as it was discused earlier for violet (still waiting for comments or corrections). This point would be also true for cleartail-bronze fallow: since NSLino is codominant to bronze fallow we can easily supose that cleartail would be dominant to bronze fallow and then, heterozygous cleartail-bronze fallow would display a cleartail phenotype, probably lighter than the homozygous cleartail.
I have a problem with this theory: I have never hear of getting bronze fallows from cleartail breeding. May be it is just because they have appeared and evolved as separate mutations (it was not the case for NSLino and cleartail), may be because bronze fallow looks like a "durty" cleartail and no one has thought of bronzefallows whenever they have appeared in his colony (as oposite to lutino which are easy to remark)... mainly if he has remark that breeding this"durty" cleartail to normal cleartail produced normal cleartails.
And now let's processing after all the theory and supositions: light cleartail (heterozygous cleartail-NSLino) X will type split cleartail will produce:
25% dark cleartail (homozygous cleartail)
25% light ceartail (heterozygous cleartail, NSLino)
25% wild type split cleartail
25% wild type split NSLino
Are there only green (wild type)/NSL inos or are we only discussing green because it is the most basic.
Theory (always theory) says that they are independent mutations, so everything which is said for the green series is also good for the blue one, with the well known respective change in colours.
I say theory, always theory, since I have not any clearttail, NSLino or bronze fallow birds, I have never bred with them, and those are theoretical conclusions from what has been exposed here. That's why I love the results of experienced breeders. Reality is always far more complicated than theory.
Cheers