Inbreeding in Captive Reptile Populations

cinnamon royals

DISCLAIMER: Some of the images depicted in this article are provoking great discussion and argument, for the fact that none of them have been PROVEN to be directly caused by inbreeding. This is true, they have not been proven. However even with seemingly unrelated individuals breeding to produce these defective young, they still appear far more commonly in morph lines of animals than are represented in other more outcrossed and healthy genetic stock of other species that remain truer to their wild, unaltered form, unspoilt by human selective breeding. It also strikes me as odd that there could be so many incubation issues leading to serious deformities in animals that are bred in huge numbers; one would think the breeders would have the art of incubation down to a fine art. Food for thought. Of course it is easier to blame incubation issues instead of actually thinking that maybe breeding such closed genetic stock might have detrimental effects over time. In any case, the pictures are included as an illustration of what CAN happen due to close line breeding of various morphs, as well as deliberate or accidental inbreeding over time. Special thanks to Thomas Burton for allowing me to use his images, and I also wanted to mention that he has shared his own findings with breeding certain mutations in royal pythons to prevent people repeating breeding mistakes that may lead to animal suffering, which is highly commendable. More information on his findings can be found here: http://www.reptilescanada.com/showthread.php/58631-Super-Cinnamons-The-Reason-Why-Not?highlight

cinnamon royal

Introduction

Captive breeding of reptiles and amphibians is a widespread activity amongst the herpetoculture hobby. It is often attempted when new owners become more proficient at caring for their reptile pets and seek to broaden their knowledge and experience with these animals thus learning about their reproductive biology. More experienced hobbyists often breed their animals as a commercial venture or indeed as a conservation effort to minimise animals being taken from the wild for the pet trade or to maintain viable captive populations of threatened species. Some commercial enterprises and indeed private keepers undertake breeding projects in order to produce large numbers of desirable species, as well as new and desirable morphs of certain species that can command high prices and therefore return an impressive profit. Captive breeding of the reptiles and amphibians one keeps is often seen as a natural progression in the hobby from having a few pets to becoming a fully-fledged ‘keeper’. As with any animal production enterprise it is important to consider the outcomes and responsibilities involved in breeding of our charges, ensuring we do so in a way that minimises suffering and maintains high standards of welfare for both the animals we breed from and ultimately any offspring we produce for the remainder of their lives.

When it comes to captive breeding of reptiles in particular, there are many concerns evident within the hobby regarding irresponsible breeding and just as many misconceptions about how the practice should be carried out in the first place. One specific concern is the issue of inbreeding in captive reptiles and the detrimental effects this is having on captive populations as a whole, animal welfare at an individual level, the ethics of captive breeding and in the current climate of animal rights opposition, the public perceptions of the hobby in general. In the following discussion I will try to address the main concerns relating to inbreeding in captive reptile and amphibian populations. This discussion assumes a basic knowledge of genetics and gene function.

So what is inbreeding and why is it important?

Inbreeding can be defined as the mating of closely related individuals or those having very similar genetic constitutions. The consequences of inbreeding over time are that the offspring produced become more and more uniform in genetic similarity, and therefore the fitness of these offspring is often adversely affected. Fitness in biological terms relates to the ability of an animal to survive and reproduce thus spreading its genetic material to the next generation. This means that in the wild state those individuals that are genetically inferior and incur a disadvantage in terms of successful foraging, predator avoidance or mate acquisition for example are less likely to live and breed so ultimately their genetic contribution to the population as a whole is minimised. Survival of the fittest ensures that the wild population of any given species is maximally suited and in tune with its environment. This fitness advantage is generally achieved through the maintenance of genetic diversity, rather than uniformity, throughout the population. Genetic diversity is the biological principle that allows adaptation and evolution at a very basic level. Natural selection has ensured that any new genetic adaptations that arise through random combinations of genetic material (genes) at each mating can contribute to those genes perpetuation through the population if they are beneficial to fitness, or indeed to the elimination of such mutations if they are detrimental to fitness of the individual expressing them.

But surely inbreeding happens in the wild?

Inbreeding in the wild state does indeed happen from time to time through chance for the most part, as nature has developed many strategies and biological behaviours designed to minimise the occurrence of closely related individuals breeding together. In certain species for example the ranging behaviours of male and female offspring differs greatly meaning that by the time these individuals reach sexual maturity they have a very small chance of selecting one of their offspring or even distant relatives as a mate. Similarly there is significant evidence at least in birds and mammals that individuals recognise closely related individuals and that this affects mate choice. There has not been as much evidence of kin recognition in ‘lower’ vertebrates such as reptiles and amphibians but this is an area that warrants further study. Even if inbreeding happens occasionally, on a population level of hundreds or even thousands of individuals in a geographical range the impact of this chance occurrence on fitness is minimal. Natural selection means that if any disadvantageous traits result from such a mating pattern these are unlikely to be perpetuated through the population as a whole. So while technically inbreeding can and does occur in the wild state from time to time, the implications of these few matings are minimal. This is because the healthy and advantageous genetic diversity of the population that allows it to adapt to its environment is maintained by natural behaviours of the population as a whole.

So if inbreeding happens in the wild, why is it a concern in captivity?

Comparing the wild state to captive populations of reptiles is scientifically invalid as it is not comparing like with like for a multitude of reasons. Inbreeding in captive populations is a huge concern for the responsible breeder of any animal including food animal production systems, pedigree dog breeding and equally in breeding captive reptiles. The basic and most important concept underlying my argument that comparing wild reptiles to captive populations is flawed is that captive populations are breeding under a system of artificial selection, which places far different pressures on the population than natural selection in the wild. Selection theory is perhaps beyond the scope of this article but at a basic level artificial selection relates to selection of genetic material to breed from based on human decisions, whereas natural selection is a process occurring in nature which seeks to maximise evolutionary advantage and adaptation of a species to its environment over time. Captive environments are incredibly different from wild environments. When we place a reptile in a captive environment we remove many of the selection pressures at play for its wild counterpart, namely providing it with optimal environmental conditions, safeguarding it from predators and providing medical care or special consideration for illness or disability. Artificial selection of reptiles in captive environments also eliminates natural systems for mate choice. In short, the animals we produce over many generations of captive breeding are most likely poorly suited for survival in the wild state. This effect is magnified in situations where generations of inbreeding, intentional or otherwise, have resulted in poor genetic diversity within a population.

Genetic diversity in captive populations of most reptile species commonly bred in the hobby is far less than that found in the wild for the simple reason that in most species the numbers in captivity are far less than the wild population. Therefore there is not as much scope for new genetic material to be encountered. Add to this fact that geographical and economic constraints affect what animals come into contact with each other, and also how far siblings and closely related individuals are distributed between keepers and future breeding projects. There is also the important fact that captive populations of some species may have derived from only a very small number of wild individuals, and that in a certain locality or country there may only be a few distinct bloodlines from which to begin a breeding project in the first place. All of these factors and more discussed later contribute to a far higher inbreeding coefficient in captive populations as opposed to wild, meaning that the probability of genetic material within that population being more uniform and closely related is higher than in a population subject to natural selection. Therefore we commonly see signs of inbreeding depression in captive populations, which can range from extremely subtle and almost invisible to distressingly and visibly severe.

Inbreeding depression can be defined as depression of performance related to inbreeding. Performance in this context can be described as simply as maintaining biological function and health, or could be measured in terms of growth rate, longevity, reproductive health and output, behavioural indicators of stress and welfare or susceptibility to disease. In comparing these indicators of health in a highly inbred population to a population with greater genetic diversity, countless scientific studies throughout the history of animal production have demonstrated that continuous inbreeding of a population decreases performance and vitality of the individuals in that population.

Farmers and dog breeders often breed closely related animals, why is it a problem?

In most animal production systems inbreeding depression is a recognised outcome of repeated close matings and therefore deliberate inbreeding is avoided as a whole except in certain circumstances. Inbreeding has had a place in the domestication of animals and the derivation of all the various animal breeds in food animals, animal athletes such as racehorses and our domestic pets. When a genetic mutation resulting in a desirable characteristic arises in a group of animals, one way to perpetuate that characteristic is to try to ‘fix’ the genetics responsible by mating the animal with a desirable trait back to a closely related individual, often a sibling or parent. As an occasional practice there are risks but they tend to be low unless lethal or severely maladaptive gene expression is magnified by doing so. Very often in a breeding programme this practice will result in establishment of a line of animals all with similar genetic expression and all carrying the same desirable traits. To use food animal production as an example, generations of artificial selection has resulted in sheep, pig and cattle breeds that all have very specific and predictable characteristics in terms of litter size, mothering ability, weight gain and carcass quality amongst others. Ultimately these are economically measurable traits that result in increased profitability for the farmer and cheaper food for the consumer.

Much of this agricultural ‘progress’ resulting in highly productive breeds came from inbreeding, or more accurately line-breeding where all the animals within the breeding population were of similar ancestry but not necessarily as closely related as sibling to sibling, or parent to offspring matings. In effect line breeding is a milder form of inbreeding, but still relies on breeding genetically similar animals together in order that the offspring have predictable and reproducible traits. In the example of food animals above, we see that the objective of these breeding practices is purely for human benefit. The opposite of inbreeding is called outcrossing where new genetic material is bred into certain lines, often to prevent or alleviate the effects on performance related to inbreeding depression. So simplistically, if for example if a farmer has a litter of piglets that reach astonishing weight gains on very low feed rations and have a lower maintenance cost from weaning to slaughter, this litter may well feature heavily in the selection of future breeding stock. He may hold back several young females and breed them back to their father or vice versa with young boars and their mother in order to test the reproducibility of this fantastic weight gain ratio. Through artificial selection, line breeding and occasional inbreeding this farmer may have developed a pig herd over many years which are far more profitable than those on many of his rival farms. Now, say for example the farmer starts to experience problems with growing numbers of female pigs (sows) having difficulty giving birth to these large piglets, or litter size in general decreasing over several years of breeding his established line. He then may find a boar from another breed or bloodline that is known to produce smaller piglets at birth or greater litter size in order to outcross some different genetic material into his line. He has experienced inbreeding depression and needs to try to inject more diversity into his bloodlines in order to keep it as profitable as he would like.

So what are the costs of inbreeding?

Unfortunately the costs are generally directly related to animal welfare. In the case of food animal production, some of the greatest animal welfare concerns of modern agriculture are derived directly from artificial selection for human benefit. Vulnerability to production diseases such as mastitis, milk fever and lameness in dairy cattle is greatly increased when the main factor pushing breeding decisions is maximum milk yield. In pig production, the farmer above may cull many weak and malformed piglets per year as it is not viable or profitable to try to nurture them without affecting profit. Culling all of these ‘defective’ piglets is a welfare issue but is accepted as the price of increased production or performance. Similarly many of his animals may suffer from disease outbreaks as their genetic resistance to pathogens is adversely affected not only by the conditions they are kept in but also by their finely tuned genetic constitution and lack of genetic diversity relating to disease resistance. If a pathogen enters an intensive production unit in which all animals are genetically similar and that pathogen is well equipped to cause infection, it may spread easily throughout the entire unit from animal to animal killing most or all of the animals within. This may not be the case where genetically diverse animals with more vigour and vitality due to outcrossing and careful breeding to ensure disease resistance were bred.

The effects of inbreeding over too many matings and crosses are generally deleterious or negative either in terms of performance, as defined earlier, or in terms of overall animal welfare, health and longevity. Professional and conscientious breeders of any species recognise this risk, and try to keep sibling to sibling or parent to offspring matings to a minimum. They will also make conscious efforts to outcross new genetic material into their line without negating the desirable traits they attempted to fix. Perhaps more visible than food animal costs of inbreeding or line breeding over time are the massive array of genetic health problems affecting pedigree dogs due to generations of close matings required to establish certain breeds from a small genetic pool of similar ancestors. Sadly the selection pressure for pedigree dog breeding is not longevity, vitality and health but purely aesthetic for what physical traits tend to be desirable and win in the show ring. Many dog breeds have become so deformed and biologically maladapted through artificial selection and close breeding practices including inbreeding and line breeding that without veterinary intervention they would quickly die out, the British Bulldog being a sad case in point. This breed almost inevitably requires Caesarian section surgery to give birth due to large puppy size, head shape and the narrow pelvic canal of the bitch in relation to the pups.

What does all this have to do with inbreeding in reptiles?

The reason I have used the above examples to briefly explain the concepts, logic, benefits and costs of inbreeding in general in food animals and domestic pets is that the majority of scientific study to date on inbreeding and artificial selection effects is in these fields. My own undergraduate degree was at an agricultural college studying animal science so I studied food animal production in great detail. Much of the knowledge of genetics and breeding is derived from studies and trials related to the food animal sector. Unfortunately, such scientific studies on the effects of various practices in captive breeding of reptiles are absent or in their infancy by comparison to the wealth of information in other species. However, the same basic biological principles apply whether you are breeding snails, guppies, lizards, snakes or high performance cattle and horses. Good breeders know the circumstances under which inbreeding may be deemed acceptable, and take great care to determine the degree of genetic diversity in the populations of animals they are working with. There is a great deal of care and design that goes into selection of animals for improvement of particular bloodlines, and thankfully nowadays much of this artificial selection is considered not only in terms of human benefit but at the same time with due attention to the welfare implications in the animals concerned.

Unfortunately in the reptile community as a whole, this background knowledge of animal breeding concepts and best practice is frequently lacking in pet owners with very little knowledge due to inexperience keeping animals and very often subject to various myths and misunderstandings even from the so called experts in reptile breeding. All too often we hear and read opinions that inbreeding doesn’t affect reptiles, that it is fine to mate sibling to sibling/offspring to parent just once, or that a breeder has mated several generations of offspring to parents without any visible ill effects. The crucial word in this latter claim is ‘visible’. I hope in this article to dispel some of these myths and misconceptions, as well as provide facts rather than opinion on why inbreeding in captive reptile populations is doing a tremendous damage to animal welfare and the hobby in general, the consequences of which we may not be able to see for some time to come.

So what are the consequences of inbreeding over time?

The consequences of inbreeding are often seen as positive to those deliberately breeding closely related reptiles in that new and attractive colour morphs or patterns can be produced. The production of new varieties and strains in captive reptile breeding has seen a massive rise in the value of individual animals, with rarity often determining extraordinary market price. One of the standard methods of producing such rarities is the use of line breeding or inbreeding once genetic aberrations appear in a population of animals. The reptile community has become more of an industry in recent years and a worrying trend of dismissing any criticism of inbreeding has emerged, with many wrongly assuming there are few if any negative consequences. The justification for this practice is, as in agricultural practice, based on human benefit rather than animal welfare and so it is important for the community and leaders in the industry to recognise and discuss the issue.

Virtually no improvements have been made in terms of animal welfare through inbreeding of captive reptile populations as far as I am aware. By contrast, many examples of compromised welfare can be seen as a direct result including both visible and non-visible effects. Visible effects include kinked spines and other skeletal malformations, reduced or defective growth rates, neurological problems as seen in Spider Royal Pythons, and even offspring hatching with severe physical deformities such as a lack of eyes or internal organs exposed outside the body. Invisible effects on the other hand are more difficult to quantify and often only come to the fore later in an animal’s life, by which time it may have already passed on its defective genetic material to many more generations. These effects include genetic defects not conducive to survival for a natural lifespan, or animals not surviving far past hatching or birth if at all, decreased disease resistance, a failure to thrive or internal deformities not apparent on first glance. The countless neonates produced by large scale breeders of reptiles which fail to hatch or are dead at birth are often dismissed as casualties of breeding large numbers of animals. Some survive, some do not. I would hazard a guess that far higher rates of neonatal death or deformity occurs in units where closely related animals are being bred than in those where heterosis is achieved or the breeder makes concerted efforts to outsource unrelated bloodlines on a regular basis and pays close attention to detail where pedigree or ancestry of the animals in their care are concerned. Perhaps this is an area that warrants further scientific research.

Bearded Dragon neonate with no eyes, several littermates affected

Bearded Dragon neonate with no eyes, several littermates affected

Persistent inbreeding over time, particularly when deliberate, is extremely difficult to justify ethically when all the scientific research and evidence points to the fact that it leads to a decline in health and welfare of the animals concerned over time. As a breeder, one has to firstly accept this as fact and then ask themselves whether they have a greater concern for the health of the animals in their care, or for making a profit at the expense of animal welfare.

Closed captive populations

Apart from deliberate inbreeding in order to ‘fix’ certain traits or enhance certain physical characteristics in a bloodline that pleases the breeder or ultimately makes more money in the commercial market, a substantial level of inbreeding occurs accidentally in captive reptiles. The reason for this is that most captive populations are relatively closed with a low level of new genetic material entering from outside sources. In a relatively small geographical area, many of the individual animals kept by enthusiasts of that particular species or morph may be descended from the same small number of individuals historically. It may have been that only a small number were imported as the founder colony of the entire captive population in that city or country, or it may be that a few breeders produced large numbers of offspring from a few pairs, thus saturating the local market with genetically similar animals. Unwittingly several years later when all of these animals mature and their owners seek out suitable mates it may mean that they are unwittingly selecting siblings or closely related individuals even if they seek new stock from reliable sources far away. Geographical and economic limitations of importing new genetic material and unrelated stock in certain species may mean it is impossible to source unrelated specimens at the right time or without considerable effort and expense. The net result of these trends over time is that closed captive populations of many commonly kept reptiles are becoming more and more inbred despite the efforts of even the most conscientious and responsible breeders. More worrying from a conservation point of view is that in endangered species where the aim of captive breeding is to protect the species from extinction in the wild these same factors can often influence the genetic variance of the captive population. The outcome is the production of animals that are genetically inferior with a substantial fitness disadvantage compared with their endangered wild counterparts. Any hope of reintroduction after a species becomes extinct in the wild is diminished if the captive breeding of that species over time has resulted in animals that are ill equipped to survive in the wild or less disease resistant.

As an example of saturation of local markets, consider the successful Bearded Dragon or Yemen Chameleon breeder, both species which have become enormously popular in recent years. These are lizards with a huge reproductive potential laying large clutches of eggs, possibly several times per year. They are also considered good ‘beginner’ lizards, the former perhaps more appropriately than the latter. Using a simple example of a breeder who has several females breeding and sells their offspring to a handful of shops in the local area or even within a 30-40 mile radius, it is easy to see that the sheer number of surviving animals that may be direct siblings when picked at random in that small geographical area two years later would be enormous. Because these animals may have been bought from the local pet store by relatively inexperienced keepers, the basics of breeder responsibility or even biology may be lacking by the time a year or two later the beginner keeper has developed confidence enough to attempt to breed from their pet. They may seek a mate for their pet from a local pet store or online classifieds and generally will not travel too far to make their purchase. Unwittingly a sibling pair is bred from and the cycle perpetuates. Several years on the majority of bearded dragons or chameleons in one small geographical area may in fact be derived directly from the same single adult pair. The magnitude of sibling to sibling or offspring to parent matings that happened along the way may span several generations. If you scale this up to a national level it is easy to imagine that genetic diversity and hence vigour can be lost accidentally, with the result that we are churning out pretty poor specimens for the pet trade, many of which succumb to our failings in captive care far sooner than if they were a little more robust like earlier generations. It is no coincidence whatsoever that certain popular species in the reptile trade are developing more and more inexplicable as well as obvious health problems when the attention to detail in selecting for genetic diversity and overall health and vigour has sharply declined and that species has become greatly overbred by amateur, short sighted, irresponsible or inexperienced hobbyists.

Two chameleons from same litter, kept in exact same conditions, one failed to thrive; a possible invisible inbreeding effect

Two chameleons from same litter, kept in exact same conditions, one failed to thrive; a possible invisible inbreeding effect

Deliberate inbreeding

Having discussed accidental inbreeding and inbreeding depression as a natural and at times somewhat unavoidable consequence of closed captive populations, it is now time to consider deliberate and unapologetic inbreeding of captive reptiles in order to produce animals as commodities for commercial gain. I may not hold a popular view here and certainly won’t endear myself to many large scale breeders but if my oath as a veterinary surgeon is to act always in the interest of the animal than I consider it vital that we get the hobby talking about the serious welfare implications the reptile industry imposes on the animals in our care. There are many supporters and advocates of deliberate inbreeding that are extremely vocal about their practices, and offer misleading justification for the practice in order to defend it. The fact as outlined previously is that inbreeding for commercial gain directly compromises individual animal welfare over time, whether that is visible immediately in physical deformity or years down the line when far more subtle signs of health and disease resistance become apparent. One of the often cited defences is referencing a particular bloodline or breeder that has bred animals closely for many generations without any problems. I would always argue that such a breeder has been very lucky, but just because they haven’t had a visible or quantifiable problem as yet doesn’t mean there isn’t a genetic time bomb lurking just below the surface of the animals in question. Such an absence of evidence is not proof that there is no risk; it just means an unfavourable outcome for that activity has not happened yet. Similarly, what a certain breeder advertises and what is kept hidden from public knowledge and perception are often two very different things. Many large scale breeders become accustomed to a level of losses, deformities or deaths amongst the animals they produce. Certainly many will recognise these as a direct result of their breeding practices, but if their venture is commercially successful and produces animals that are visibly, outwardly healthy and that earn a profit, then there is very little advantage in advertising the fact that many more animals were produced that didn’t survive or had to be culled due to health issues in their bloodline. This is the hidden cost to animal welfare that is often swept under the rug, and the average consumer buying a Royal Python morph for example does not factor in these losses of life that were part of producing their new pet.

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The morph craze

The rise of colour morphs in certain species, most notably in Royal Pythons and Leopard Geckoes in recent years has seen a massive increase in the level of inbreeding within the reptile hobby that is not only now expected but also glorified and defended with extraordinary vigour. My introduction to the reptile community in my early teenage years was surrounded by keepers who were fascinated by the natural biology and behaviour of the myriad of reptile and amphibian species from different regions of the world. Generally enclosures and husbandry techniques attempted to emulate the wild habitat and the use of naturalistic vivaria with living plants was widespread. Selective breeding for unusual traits or ‘domestication’ of species was not so widespread. The hobby has changed considerably since then, and the more worrying trend is that it has become more of an industry for many where animals are kept and produced in minimal welfare standards in order to maximise profit. I’ve mentioned elsewhere the health implications and welfare concerns inherent in mass production of reptiles in large scale facilities, and the culture that extends to the small scale keeper as a result in terms of housing, husbandry and value of the individuals kept.

Crested gecko hatchling with no limbs

Crested gecko hatchling with no limbs

The boom in popularity of reptiles as pets in recent years has led to a stunning variety of morphs or man-made artificially selected forms that vary significantly from the wild-type of that particular species. These morphs have arisen through careful selection for desirable traits, and are often exemplified or propagated by inbreeding. Without inbreeding it would not be possible to produce many of the common morphs we see today, some of which have superceded the original wild type form in certain species to the point it has itself become a rarity in the trade. The two biggest species I mention above in terms of morphs created, the Leopard Gecko and Royal Python, are also the best examples to use when describing the specific problems that manifest when inbreeding is lauded as a positive practice and the negative consequences of the practice ignored or worse still falsely justified. For fear of writing a book instead of an article I will not go into tremendous detail on all the genetic problems associated with morphs in these species but I would encourage all readers to investigate for themselves the genetic dysfunctions inherent in the following few examples:

Enigma Leopard Geckoes with neurological or vestibular (balance) disease

Cryptosporidium susceptibility in many Leopard Gecko strains (thought to have some genetic component for parasite resistance)

Spider Royal pythons with mild to severe neurological issues aka ‘wobbles’

Lethal gene combinations in many Royal morph pairings

Spinal kinking, duckbills, bug eyes and other physical malformations in Royal Pythons

It is simply undeniable that a great proportion if not all of these health issues of the animals being produced are at least partly if not fully attributable to degrees of inbreeding associated with their production. Breeders and hobbyists alike can argue all they want on the merits and justifications of doing so, but the bottom line is that to continue breeding these defective lines of animals without substantial and considered efforts to improve the lines by outcrossing is tantamount to animal abuse and is only justified for financial gain.

 

Dispelling the Myths

Many excuses or justifications are given when the practice of inbreeding is raised. All can be rebuttalled easily, applying the following logic.

Crossing siblings, parents, and heterozygotes carry different levels of risk

This may be true in isolation for single matings but if one considers the effect of many breeders ‘allowing’ close matings over many years and in geographically limited areas the inbreeding coefficient for the whole population rises sharply. By ‘allowing’ close matings in your collection to ‘enhance’ the appearance of whatever strain or morph you are producing, you are having a detrimental impact on the overall genetic health of that population as a whole in the future.

Single matings aren’t harmful, only repeated crossings of related animals

Again one breeder ‘allowing’ a single mating between two siblings or parent to offspring may not carry a huge risk when viewed as an isolated event, but considering the bloodline involved may be highly inbred already if traced back far enough, and considering the likelihood of future closely related crossings being carried out with the offspring produced, each single mating dismissed as an isolated low risk event has the potential to impact the genetic integrity of the animals in future. Breeders should not be so short-sighted as to think their actions in their current generation of apparently healthy animals has no impact on the future health of the next generations.

Wild occurrence

As discussed earlier wild populations are maximally suited to their environment, otherwise they would not survive. Comparing artificially selected animals bred for appearance and other arbitrary human values, aesthetic or economic, with wild populations where an occasional inbreeding event has no great impact on the population is an invalid argument.

Low incidence in certain species or bloodlines

I have seen many times in discussions on inbreeding the person defending the practice citing an example they know where they or a colleague has ‘bred seven generations of Jaguar Carpet pythons using sibling and parent matings with no problems’ for example. This is not proof that inbreeding is not harmful. This is an example where someone has not seen any of the visible effects of inbreeding over time in their line of animals. They may be lucky so far that nothing visible has been identified. Genetics relies on chance mutations and gene combinations. Many times highly inbred animals can be produced and don’t display any negative effects. But arguing that because this is true that inbreeding in general is without risk is foolish. Applying a similar logic someone might say car crashes do not happen or are very low risk because they have been driving for 20 plus years and have never had a crash. It is simply an illogical defence and no excuse to make light of the often serious consequences of inbreeding.

Primitive Vs advanced vertebrates?

Another opinion that is often given to defend current breeding practices and standards in the reptile industry is that inbreeding does not seem to affect lower vertebrates such as fish, amphibians and reptiles compared with mammals for instance. This is not proven fact. The fact is that much of the research carried out on inbreeding to date in the scientific literature relates only to mammal species and birds. The reason for this is that agricultural and animal science research has primarily focused to date on agricultural species. As discussed earlier vast data and research exists on genetic variation and inbreeding effects in terms of the domestication of species, and animal production for human benefit. Unfortunately, herpetoculture is still in it’s infancy by comparison to agriculture which has been around for thousands of years. Fecundity of captive reptiles, as in their ability to reproduce large numbers of offspring, is lower in many species than others. And we have also been breeding many of the species we keep in captivity for a few generations in relatively small numbers so to date may not have seen the effects of inbreeding depression in most. With the huge rise in inbreeding in the past 10-20 years we have also seen a variety of health problems becoming more apparent, some very subtle and relating to disease resistance and reproductive success which may be directly related to genetic issues.

Defective young are culled so good breeders only sell or breed healthy animals

There are two serious problems with this sort of statement. Firstly, there is an ethical dilemma with producing large numbers of defective offspring only to cull them immediately or once realised that they are excess to requirements. Not to mention that methods of culling are often questionable in humane terms or in efficacy. Secondly, if you have even 10% of a clutch of eggs hatching physically deformed neonates then arguably none of the rest of the related clutch should be deemed as reproductively viable animals. Invariably they are all carrying the potential to display this trait in future generations. Therefore saying the unhealthy ones are culled and a breeder is responsible because they only sell the physically perfect specimens ignores the fact that the breeder is selling from a bloodline that carries invisible genes and problems. If a new owner buys from this bloodline and decides to breed later they are likely unaware of the full genetic potential of their animal, to produce desirable and undesirable offspring in the same clutch or litter. Subsequent generations may have an even higher instance of congenital deformities. This sort of problem in the industry is the hidden cost of the morph craze and deliberate inbreeding. Many thousands of animals fail to hatch, fail to thrive or are so badly deformed that they are killed immediately after birth or hatching. Do we as hobbyists want this as the reality and standard of how we operate, especially in light of all the opponents that criticise us on animal welfare grounds? Most people don’t take into account when they buy their high end royal python morph for example the sheer number of defective and unthrifty babies that were produced and culled in order to produce our pet. Is that a standard practice we should consider or knowingly contribute to? I would argue that these are the things we should consider when buying into a culture of deliberate inbreeding. But most people are unaware because the breeders are not advertising their genetic mutant offspring for all to see and marvel over. And some people just don’t want to know at what cost their animal is produced, which is a great pity.

 

Conclusion

In conclusion the issue of inbreeding in captive reptiles is one that generates a lot of interest, much argument and a great deal of mistruths being touted as fact in order to defend current practices. If one respects even the basic tenets of animal husbandry and breeding then accepting that inbreeding is detrimental to animal health and welfare over time is the only responsible option. Consistently justifying the practice as harmless and propagating mistruths to those looking for advice as a way of defending the practice is misguided at best and dangerous at worst. As the reptile hobby has grown into a multi-million dollar industry, sadly production has become more and more intensive to the point animals are now very much a commodity in line with intensive agriculture. Big commercial breeders are idolised and respected in the industry, however some are more responsible than others. Their opinion and expertise especially when it comes to breeding is respected and their methods trickle down to the small scale breeder over time. If that advice advocates deliberate inbreeding as standard practice and neglects to inform of the significant risks and costs in terms of animal welfare then I think we need to be fearful of where the industry is heading. When discussing the issue of inbreeding it is vital to consider whether it is being done for commercial gain or for the benefit of the animals. It is invariably the former, and if you are supporting that side of the industry then you must ask yourself which is more important for you as a reptile keeper, human profit and enjoyment or animal welfare?

 

54 thoughts on “Inbreeding in Captive Reptile Populations

  1. The deformity pictures are deliberately misleading… you can produce offspring like that in genetically diverse animals — all you have to do is do something wrong during incubation. I’ve had unrelated pairs throw offspring like that, and each time it was because of errors in my incubation. The same pairs that have thrown severely deformed animals have also thrown perfect animals.

    • Who decides that such defects “are most likely the result of improper incubation rather than a genetic anomaly” Bob? In the same vein I would argue that any deformity seen in the morph trade is attributed to incubation temperatures rather than a chance of inbreeding depression being at fault. Convenient argument but it doesn’t stand up. Why do we seemingly have a far higher occurrence of these ‘incubation issues’ in closely related genetic stock as opposed to wild type, less overbred species of reptile in captivity. Similarly, why are so many breeders screwing up their incubation temperatures so badly? You would have thought it was a fairly simple effort using a simple thermostat to maintain the correct environmental parameters throughout the incubation period. You see it bandied around so often as justification for highly deformed animals appearing in morph lines, whilst dismissing the mere possibility of inbreeding being a cause that you’d almost start to believe it as gospel truth!

  2. Preface: I have not read the entire article, I plan to go back and re-read in detail.

    The author is attributing every single defect in each of these animals to inbreeding.

    Was any genetic testing ever done to actually validate this claim? In development, SO MANY THINGS can go wrong. There are millions of cells, uncounted processes that embryos go through in development, and if at any time, just a single one of those things goes wrong, you can get a hatchling with any of the above deformations. There are also a ton of environmental things that can affect the survival rate of a clutch. A temp spike early on in incubation can cause a whole host of problems.

    Genetic mutations can occur randomly and cause issues in unrelated individuals. Any trisomy variance (I’m not sure what it would be called in reptiles, but that is what it is called in humans) can cause either death, or a whole host of other issues (trisomy 21 is downs sydrome, to give you an idea of what the human equivalent is). Any trisomy (3 copies of a chromosome) below (I believe) 22 is lethal and the resulting embryo/pregnancy will self terminate. They aren’t compatible with life.

    I’m not saying to discount genetic diversity, it’s an important thing, but this just seems like a lot of fear mongering.

      • Something not addressed in the disclaimer is that the majority of your deformed ball python photos are “super cinnamons”. This is a well known defective gene combination in the ball python breeding community. At first, everyone was excited to see that the homozygous form of the cinnamon morph created a patternless, almost black snake. However, it QUICKLY became apparent that many of the homozygous animals were defective. Some perfectly formed individuals die prematurely, others have “duck bill” faces that are of huge concern since, ideally, color/pattern mutations should only have superficial effects. And finally, we learned that a high percentage of homozygous cinnamons and black pastels are born severely deformed.

        From Burton himself in 2012:
        “That being said I wanted to let everyone know the very real possibility of defects/deformations that comes along with breeding super cinnamons – I will tell you now that this is the last Cinnamon to Cinnamon pairing I will EVER attempt. If you wondered why there aren’t more super cinnamons out there, this is more than likely the answer.”

        Super cinnamon projects have been hit hard by this revelation, and despite the heterozygous animals being widely available, the homozygous animals are disproportionately rare, and justifiably unpopular.

        It is an interesting counterpoint to your inbreeding hypothesis that the majority of other ball python morphs with associated defects are actually dominant mutations… so they don’t require inbreeding. An extensive pedigree on your average “spider” morph would probably have far more genetic variation that a typical purebred dog. Up until relatively recently, the majority of breeder females kept in collections came directly from Africa (as either wild caught, or “captive hatched”). Back then, a breeder would purchase an expensive heterozygous morph like a spider or cinnamon, and then breed it to half a dozen *genetically wild* animals. The striking “selectively bred” appearances you see in many of these simple Mendelian mutations often belie a surprisingly deep gene pool due to those wild out crosses. All of the normal females in my collection are wild bred (aka captive hatched) animals that I purchased 10+ years ago. I’ve been fairly pleased with the amount of self-regulation in the community regarding inbreeding, as well as new information about problematic mutations spreading rapidly.

        TL;DR – Of course inbreeding is bad. However, the ball python defects you picture are far more likely to be related to specific pleiotropic / homozygous-defective mutations, rather than background mutations popping up due to line-breeding.

      • Appreciate that input. Where I focused specifically on inbreeding as a general problem, the broader picture I am concerned about is the selective breeding we see in the hobby that often results in welfare problems particularly in the constant quest for new and valuable oddities as seen with the morph craze.

    • the disclaimer is literally the first line. Not only did you not read the “entire article” you failed to begin. Its not a picture book. Dont be lazy

  3. Hi Sean, To paraphrase, you mention that the neurological issues with your two examples of morphs(Enigma in Leopard Geckos and Spider in Ball Pythons) are at least partly if not fully attributable to degrees of inbreeding. Are you aware that those are both dominant traits? Since dominant/incomplete dominant traits are expressed in their first generation there is no need or advantage to inbreeding. Subsequently, there are bloodlines of each morph which have never been inbred in all of their generations of captive breeding, especially due to breeders attempts to strengthen a bloodline to weed out the neurological problems associated with those morphs.

    I personally don’t find it ethical to reproduce traits like these that may compromise an animals well being, but certainly I don’t speak for all breeders. However, as someone who has been heavily involved in the captive bred Ball Python and Leopard Gecko markets over the last decade, I have noticed that as gene’s like Enigma and Spider are understood for what they are- bad genetic mutations, and not “weak from inbreeding and could be improved in future generations”, people are less and less inclined to produce them. Assumptions that inbreeding is the cause of the problems associated with these traits has in fact made the problem more wide spread.

    Thankfully, genes like the two above are the exception, not the rule. If you consider that most genetic color and pattern traits in Ball Pythons are incomplete dominant, the huge number of new bloodlines imported in previous years, the global trade in captive bred Ball Pythons,and the natural human aversion to breeding related animals when totally unnecessary, I would wager that in general, captive populations of Ball Pythons are even more diverse than in the wild. Ball Pythons make great pets and are probably the most commonly bred reptile in captivity- it’s not hard to find a couple pictures of the occasional deformities that happen during incubation. While it’s undeniable that a deformity could be a rare recessive, lethal mutation, most of your examples of deformed Ball Pythons are ones with pattern anomalies typical of incubation stress, sometimes from inappropriate temperatures or mold from a neighboring bad egg, and umbilical cord knot on another.

    Your article seems like an attack on reptile breeders, but in case it’s partly a misunderstanding of genetics and intentions, I figured I would try to clarify for your readers.

    • Hi Kyle, thanks for your input. My inclusion specifically of the Enigma and Spider problems were to draw attention to the fact that inherent genetic problems are still being propagated when it is arguably ethically indefensible to do so. I appreciate the wording could have been a bit clearer on that in relation to not being a direct inbreeding effect. And maybe I should have expanded on the article to explain the wider problems in captive breeding. Direct inbreeding isn’t the only issue explored. Breeding certain lines of animals, even from (seemingly) unrelated stock, that continue to throw up welfare compromised offspring shouldn’t be continued in my humble opinion. I don’t see that as an attack on breeders, I see it as common sense and the right thing to do for animal welfare reasons.

  4. It seems that any deformity in captive reptiles ultimately is attributed to inbreeding. The deformities in the pictures presented here are most likely the result of improper incubation rather than a genetic anomaly. Many reptiles, including the species featured in this article, maintain limited home ranges and lack the ability to travel great distances. It more likely that a wild snake will breed with another animal that is at least somewhat related to it than to a completely unrelated animal.

    • Who decides that such defects “are most likely the result of improper incubation rather than a genetic anomaly” Bob? In the same vein I would argue that any deformity seen in the morph trade is attributed to incubation temperatures rather than a chance of inbreeding depression being at fault. Convenient argument but it doesn’t stand up. Why do we seemingly have a far higher occurrence of these ‘incubation issues’ in closely related genetic stock as opposed to wild type, less overbred species of reptile in captivity. Similarly, why are so many breeders screwing up their incubation temperatures so badly? You would have thought it was a fairly simple effort using a simple thermostat to maintain the correct environmental parameters throughout the incubation period. You see it bandied around so often as justification for highly deformed animals appearing in morph lines, whilst dismissing the mere possibility of inbreeding being a cause that you’d almost start to believe it as gospel truth! If you read my article, you’ll also appreciate why occasional inbreeding in the wild is not comparable to what we do in captivity. There is a massive difference between natural and artificial selection. And our inbreeding coefficients in captivity are exponentially higher in captivity so that argument is null and void I’m afraid.

      • Who has decided that inbreeding is responsible for the deformities, you I suppose? You enter the discussion with an obvious bias. We’ve all seen some of these problems in the snakes we breed. How have you determined that the cause is NOT due to incorrect incubation or to some other cause? How have you determined that the rate of deformity is greater than in the wild? I’ve bred as many pythons as anyone and I can’t say that I see a deformity more often in related animals than in unrelated ones. I don’t have hard numbers to support my statement but that makes us even. Certainly inbreeding coefficients are higher in captivity and I’ll allow that deformities may be higher as well. I’m uncomfortable with your broad and unsupported statements condemning the industry and their practices at least to the extent that you think you understand them.

        I breed pythons for money. I make no excuse for this. It’s in my interest to produce the best possible animals in terms of health, color and pattern according to what the market demands. In this sense I’m a farmer, no different than any other, carrying on a proud tradition. I am the modern incarnation of the guy that caught and bred the ancestors of the first chicken, pig or cow. It’s what we do, only now, when it is not just our food supply and our survival at stake, we have the luxury to criticize and condemn the process.

  5. We both enter the discussion with an obvious bias in that case. I am openly saying I haven’t decided which is incubation, which is genetic or as a result of inbreeding in origin. I don’t believe there has been any data published unfortunately. The aim of the article was not to judge and condemn, it was to steer inexperienced keepers away from the relatively common practice of breeding closely related animals together, as is widely accepted in certain portions of the industry at present.

  6. Pingback: Inbreeding in Captive Reptile Populations – Perfect Pets

  7. I’m surprised no one here has addressed the fact that inbreeding reptiles (Specifically common ones) for bright colours is an unethical practice. On websites like Youtube, many people (most notably, is Brian Barzyk, from snakebytes) are promoting “vanity” or “designer” reptiles, without ever openly mentioning how they’re made.

    In case you’re wondering, I am defining “unethical” as an act that is accomplished through harmful or demeaning treatment. So creating a purple Eublepharis Macularius (Leopard gecko) that wouldn’t live in the wild, is pretty unethical by my standards.

    Our reptile community is surprisingly corrupt, by which massive reptile industries control our thoughts and emotions. By making us hear their stories and their weak excuses (we have no other reptile input) we eventually believe that such practices in the reptile industry are OK.

    I was derailed from my support of morphs by a magnificent reptile zoo, who showed me that the ways of people like Brian are foolish and unethical.

    I’ll stick to the normals, thanks

    • How have you determined that an animal’s suitability for survival in the wild is a measure by which to judge the breeder’s ethics? If you think “massive reptile industries control our thoughts and emotions”, I think it’s time you get fitted for a new tin foil hat.

      • As I re-read my previous comment, I admit that “Massive reptile industries control our thoughts and emotions” is a bit much, but without someone to explain WHY inbreeding is flawed, we’re “Forced” to agree with what certain people think is acceptable and what is not. My reasoning, is that there’s nowhere else to go for information.

        Also, making something that isn’t “real” is first of all, foolish, but mostly detrimental to an animal’s well being. A purple leo can’t feel safe, it just feels to exposed, to bright.

        Good comeback with the tinfoil hat, though.

      • “flawed”, “forced”, “detrimental”, not “real”……..not much to quantify here. It’s completely arbitrary. I don’t suppose any nocturnal gecko feels safe in bright light. I’m pretty sure the animal doesn’t know what color it is either. Don’t feel “forced” to agree with me. If you want to convince me, though, you’ll need to support your claims.

      • Morph breeding is essentially inbreeding in the same way with dog breeds. Most dog breeds have a lot of inborn defects that appear because of inbreeding and deficiancy in genetic variation of the breeds gene pool.
        The same thing is with all these morphs, but the genetic variation is even smaller than dog breeds because of number of individuals and breeders. So, there is a higher chance of genes with negative effect taking place causing inborn defects and reducing animals quality of life.

        Like the examples with spider morph and neurological issues. Say what you want, IMO thats animal abuse, and buying morph animals supports it.

        Of course incubation is also crucial to proper development of individual, but with inbreeding there can be more malformations in embryo’s development process hence the inborn defects.

        Another thing concerning genetic variation that shouldn’t be forgotten is outbreeding depression where two specimens that are very far in relation from one to another produce healthy offspring but because of big genetic differences they might carry defective genes that will be visible only in second generation, this might apply to breeding different region reptiles together.

        Basically, genetic material works the same way in all animals and you can clearly see inbreeding effects on some isolated human populations too so there’s no doubt that morph breeding is responsible for a lot of deformities and stillborns in reptile breding

  8. You mention the neurological issue with the spider trait in ball pythons but I’m not aware of any other issues associated with other traits, are you? Can we really be against inbreeding and outbreeding at the same time?

  9. Well, the spider morph one is the most noticed. A lot of traits from inbreeding are often unseen as they are working on molecular level in cells like amyloidosis, and such processes while being invisible decrease the lifespan of individual. Also comparing “fresh blood” in hobby and long bred lines should show decrease in immune system (mostly constrictors) and cancer happening more often in longer bred animals.

    As for inbreeding and outbreeding, I think we should be mostly concerned with inbreeding, because chances of outbreeding happening in this hobby are very small. I just mentioned it because it’s one of the factors which are taken in concern when endangered populations in wild are being recreated.

    • And most of the detrimental processes are part genetic and part environmental. So incubation, nutrition and keeping conditions also play important role.

      • If the “problems” are unseen and have no symptoms, are they really problems at all? Ever since people have been growing crops and raising animals they have been selecting for desirable traits. what makes a ball python different than a cow, a chicken or a tomato?

      • Bob you say: “If the “problems” are unseen and have no symptoms, are they really problems at all?”

        Yes, they are. Because many of these problems are undoubtedly foetal death, foetal malformation, failure to hatch, deformed neonates, non viable neonates, failure to thrive, reduced reproductive performance, reduced longevity/lifespan or the breeders favourite excuse ‘incubation problems’. Just because these issues are hard to categorically blame on lack of genetic diversity, line breeding and inbreeding doesn’t mean they are not symptoms of it.

        Ignoring the biological likelihood this is the case is either protecting your interests (economic, reputation or otherwise), ignorance of how extreme selective breeding is detrimental to animal welfare or burying your head in the sand.

      • “burying my head in the sand”? how about supporting what you say with some proof? You may be right but you’ll have to show me. You’re very certain of you position but have no data to support it.

      • I’ve just told you why we won’t get proof. It relies on honest reporting of the problem and data from the breeders with vested interests in brushing the problem under the carpet! Even if I undertook such a study, I would only get data from willing and transparent breeders happy to participate so the results would be skewed and inaccurate.

        You can be very certain of a position by extrapolating basic biological principles across species. Ignoring the problem because you can’t get the data to prove its very high probability just smacks of avoidance to me, aka ‘burying your head in the sand’.

  10. Well, just because you can’t see internal organ malformation doesn’t mean the individual is healthy. And veterinary diagnostics especially in reptiles aren’t as advanced as in medicine. So you couldn’t tell if the snake has for example pancreas issues which causes diabetus.

    As for selective breeding in cows and etc., domesticated animals have a bunch of genetic diseases that are carried through linear breeding ( for example certain breeds of goats have disorders that are noticible only by reading their DNA and it causes sudden death at 5 years of age, a lot of infant deaths, no visible traits before that, while their normal lifespan is much longer), and nowadays cattle sperm is traded between breeders to keep their populations fresh.

    Just because you don’t research and know about these processes doesn’t mean they don’t exist, and sadly a lot of reptile breeders seem to be careless too.

      • I don’t think it’s possible (or matters) to prove the point Rokas is making with visible evidence. You won’t get it. The only proof you’d get on the invisible effects of inbreeding would be widespread retrospective studies of the overall population of whatever morph or retpile species you wanted to investigate. To report meaningful data and correlations between inbreeding coefficients and effects on mortality, morbidity and ‘incubation problems’ would require massive (honest) data collection from all of those that are inbreeding and line breeding reptiles, morphs in particular. Including data on how many foetuses or neonates are deformed, die early or fail to develop. We just won’t get that honest data I’d bet because a lot of the casualties of the reptile morph obsession are brushed under the carpet as inevitable consequences without much regard for the welfare of individual animals.

        To ascribe all of those issues to ‘incubation problems’ is a very simplistic view. Almost guaranteed that many of these animals die or fail to develop properly during incubation because at the basic molecular level something is genetically wrong as Rokas points out. Basic biological knowledge dictates that the longer and more closely you breed somewhat related lines of animals (and I’d love a widespread genetic study to show just how closely related a lot of morph lines actually are, but again won’t happen as requires co-operation and honesty), the less vigorous these animals become, the shorter their lifespan and in many cases the poorer their welfare. Ignoring that fact and stating, ‘Well we do it with agricultural livestock so what’s the difference?’ doesn’t make it any more morally correct.

  11. I wasn’t arguing “moral correctness”. I’m talking about biology not philosophy. Simply put, I’m saying that if we don’t see a problem…… if the unseen “problem” has no symptoms is there really a problem? As you say you need to study this to prove what you say. Until then it’s just conjecture.

    • OK. We know the following list is a problem even though they are not visible deformities:

      “foetal death, foetal malformation, failure to hatch, deformed neonates, non viable neonates, failure to thrive, reduced reproductive performance, reduced longevity/lifespan or the breeders favourite excuse ‘incubation problems”

      With the lack of available data to prove a link between them and breeding practices (or any possibility of getting a non biased study done on the subject), can we use our knowledge of biology to say with a high degree of confidence that breeding practices definitely contribute to a large extent?

      • I come from a science background. without empirical data to support your beliefs we don’t KNOW. You may be right but this is only your belief. Arguably, I know more about this than anyone on the planet and my experience differs quite a bit from your beliefs.

      • I agree we don’t KNOW. I’ve told you we aren’t ever likely to get that empirical data. BUT you’ve deliberately avoided my question (more head in the sand behaviour). My question was can we use our knowledge of biological principles to say with a high degree of confidence that breeding practices contribute to “foetal death, foetal malformation, failure to hatch, deformed neonates, non viable neonates, failure to thrive, reduced reproductive performance, reduced longevity/lifespan or the breeders favourite excuse incubation problems”?

  12. not at all. You’re looking for a problem that you can’t find, symptoms that you can’t see and trying to prove something that you want to believe. I’m not going to have prostate surgery without a diagnosis!

  13. I didn’t mean to avoid your question. I thought my answer was clear, if only implied. I don’t see the problems you mention. I’m someone actually involved in breeding these animals. I produce large numbers of pythons annually and can speak with some authority based on this experience. Without empirical data, what exactly is the basis for your position on this?

    • Do you have ‘normal’ specimens and do you breed them with others? Do you measure weight, length of your snakes? How fresh are your pythons meaning how much related are they? I think you should observe these factors and while there might be no negative traits showing in your collection keep in mind that someone might buy a related couple from you and after several generations of that the negative traits might appear. We are not talking about inbreeding as a single coopulation of related individuals, we are talking about the continuation of it through generations.

      • your concern is that I’ll sell a pair of snakes that may or may not be related and that my customer might breed these snakes for several generations and at some point in the future a problem might occur? I’ve got many things above this on my worry list! Now this is just getting silly.

      • I think the concern isn’t focused on you specifically. It’s that the very situation you describe is happening on a wholesale level in limited geographical regions which has a magnifying effect on the hidden effects of inbreeding/linebreeding and loss of genetic diversity. All really in pursuit of the next valuable morph in many cases.

  14. No one’s doing surgical intervention or treatment without proof. I think we are getting derailed now. Point is, that inbreeding is unhealthy and abusive practice on animals.

    There are snake morphs that have their life expectancy shortened to 3-5 years, meaning that there is something happening internally that damages the health. But I sort of get your point that there isn’t that many evidence and publications on such cases. That is because there is little to no funding on such projects because breeders don’t seem to be concerned about that, majority of them don’t even understand the principles genetics and inheritance, to me they all seem to be just playing with colours, without knowing the consequences.

    But using other animals models like pigs, goats, dogs, horses and etc. we do see that inbreeding brings out certain negative or fatal traits that affect well-being of the animal.

    If there would be funding and more people interested in it I think it would be possible to research the genome of certain morph and determine why such coloration appears and what sort of pathological enzymes are produced. But as for now breeders seem to be more concerned to get the certain colour or pattern out of the snake, than understand why such things are happening.

    Also, some animals are more susceptible to inbreeding depression than others. Like inbred boas seem to have much more problems with their immune system, calcium absorbtion and are very susceptible to Inclusive body disease and respiratory diseases, while most of the african house snakes are more resistant to inbreeding depression and show no negative traits, but still if you line breed them, after 15 generations or so there will be negative effects.

    Well whats your viewpoint on this?

    • My view is the same as I’ve stated. You can’t show a correlation. When i question your lack of data you guys say it’s difficult to get and double down on your accusations, even bringing MORALITY into the argument. I can speak with some authority on this subject and I don’t see the numerous problems you mention. Really, I like to argue but let’s put some facts on the table if we’re going to continue.

      • Do you see ‘incubation problems’ resulting in failure to hatch, foetal death or malformation at all in your collection? Surely you don’t have a 100% successful hatch rate?! But if so, surely being so well connected to the wider reptile breeding community you must see problems people have when breeding all the time, that are put down to ‘incubation problems’ or chance occurrence? Over and above accepting the likelihood of hidden problems in that line of animals’ genetic makeup.

        Also, do you keep all of your adult animals until they die a natural death? Or until they reach the end of their economically viable breeding life? What happens to them then? Any insights you have on longevity of royal python morphs would be most welcome if you cared to share?

      • No, not every egg hatches a viable baby. Of course not. Do I know the cause? No. Is there a higher incidence of this in animals showing color and pattern traits that differ from the wild type? I don’t think so. What is the rate of non viable hatchlings in wild snakes? I don’t know. I don’t have your certainty but I do have a considerable amount of experience breeding pythons over 40 years. I don’t often keep animals after their productivity diminishes but I’ve bred many individual animals over a very long time. I think royal pythons may be productive for many years, probably decades. I’ve told you what I know and what I think I don’t claim to know anything more than I’ve stated. I don’t see a point in continuing this discussion if you continue to take positions that can’t be defended with fact.

      • You might see the morality argument as separate. I don’t. I’m interested in objective studies of animal health and welfare and also ethical discussion about human use of animals. Hence the long article I wrote some time ago now which is still provoking great discussion.

  15. Here’s a case with lacerta sp. https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Mats_Olsson3/publication/230237667_Malformed_offspring_sibling_matings_and_selection_against_inbreeding_in_the_sand_lizard_(Lacerta_agilis)/links/54684abb0cf2f5eb18037445.pdf

    If you do the selective breeding responsibly and get rid of the defective offspring then you might reduce the chance of deformities happening,
    as for the ethics I agree with the petvet, these animals are living and conscious to some level beings that feel pain and stress so they should be maintained and bred to their best interest.

  16. I know this is an old thread, but for anybody reading this . The photos are either super cinnamon, or super black pastel. Both of which have a significantly higher rate of kinking and failure out of the egg. If you buy two far black pastels or two cinnamons ,far removed from the same gene pool the odds are you are going to get kinked offspring. Do not tweak incubation, do not get two black pastel or cinnamons from different breeders and think that will make it better. Spider x spider is lethal, and you dont see people saying to out cross or change incubation. Some Gene’s just dont work together. Check the market for Panda pieds. Notice there aren’t to many? It’s because most dont make it. BP and cinnamons are awesome with other morphs just dont breed them together.

  17. I really enjoyed this article, and I appreciated reading the opinion of a veterinarian, rather than what the breeders report. I am only commenting this long after its original publication because its seems I might have a little bit to offer.

    I was thinking of getting into the hobby as a side business in the next few years as I think I’d enjoy keeping and breeding Python regius. I am a biochemist by trade, and have a history of working in biotechnology, specifically plant breeding and genetic engineering. As a result I have some prior experience with the effects of selective breeding. Genetic defects and deformities occur in plants too, and need to be addressed.

    I quickly became concerned about a potential inbreeding problem, which led me here. After I learned of specific “morphs” that had correlated skeletal, morphological and neurological defects, it was one of the first things I thought might be contributing. Fortunately, as the breeders commenting here have stated, the pictured hatchlings seem to be homozygous for lethal or problematic alleles. Still inbreeding is a creeping issue, and can take quite a long time to manifest a catastrophe. Good to know responsible breeders have been outcrossing their animals occasionally, which is very comforting.

    I am somewhat aghast to find that so little real science has been done on Python regius genetics given the huge breeder and hobbyist base. I was only able to find one paper that addressed the issue of where the morphs are coming from, if tangentially. Specifically why colour and pattern seems to correlate strongly with neurological development. Why does having a spider pattern result in a head wobble, and why is homozygosity lethal? It appears that melanocytes (one of three different cells that influence colour in snake skin) and the nervous system stem from the same developmental feature; the neural crest. As a result, breeding to affect the colour of the snake, may directly influence the neurological development, since both cells come from the same developmental cell lineage.

    It also seems to be the case that many of the “genes” identified (I am a bit skeptical if all are single genes in the strictest cellular definition at this point) likely code for transcription factors. Transcription factors, for those who don’t know, are proteins that regulate the function of other genes. Mutating one of these therefore can change the expression and function of a host of other genes. If the “morph-gene” mutants can be traced to genes that code for transcription factors, it means that means that each such morph is in fact the result of many different genes being affected by a single mutation, which will give very unexpected and novel results. Thus far, transcription factors coding genes are a very likely candidate for the origin of the many morphs observed.

    This is somewhat concerning, since it means that in an effort to breed ever more unique colorations and patterns, other more crucial developmental genetic traits may be adversely affected. I really hope population geneticists out there get onto this and take the initiative in getting it fully under control before worse things happen. I also think breeders would benefit substantially from having a deeper understanding what exactly they are breeding and how to counteract potentially damaging coupling errors.

    As for myself, I think the least that can be done is to do some very robust tracking of whether certain supposed “morph-genes” co-occur with greater frequency than others, and if simple Mendelian genetics holds in all cases. I have my doubts about that to be honest. Real world genetics has homologous recombination after-all, and the centimorgan is sort of outdated in some contexts, but I think it might be useful here. It would at least be a start.

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