joeyasaurusrex
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Hello all,
I was wondering if it would be a plausible idea to try an experiment, sort of a "survival of the fittest" type of thing... where one would attempt to breed a strain of axolotls who do not require live food as hatchlings.
It seems like plenty of people have been able to breed cool colors and control things with axolotl genetics,
My theory is that if a couple of hatchlings could survive feeding something like tubifex worms or baby brine shrimp which is not living, could one then use those survivors to establish a breeding colony with the sole intent of breeding toward establishing a higher percentages of survivors after several generations?
If something like this were possible I think it would make raising the hatchlings so much less trouble.
Let me know what you guys think... remember this is entirely hypothetical.
I was wondering if it would be a plausible idea to try an experiment, sort of a "survival of the fittest" type of thing... where one would attempt to breed a strain of axolotls who do not require live food as hatchlings.
It seems like plenty of people have been able to breed cool colors and control things with axolotl genetics,
My theory is that if a couple of hatchlings could survive feeding something like tubifex worms or baby brine shrimp which is not living, could one then use those survivors to establish a breeding colony with the sole intent of breeding toward establishing a higher percentages of survivors after several generations?
If something like this were possible I think it would make raising the hatchlings so much less trouble.
Let me know what you guys think... remember this is entirely hypothetical.