Incest is best.

PIter

Arachnoangel
Old Timer
Joined
Jun 6, 2004
Messages
989
Do scorpons care weather their mate is their brother or sister? Does innbreeding effect scorpions? Does it happen in the wild?
 

alex

Arachnobaron
Old Timer
Joined
Dec 26, 2003
Messages
558
In the wild, only 1% of all scorpions reach adulthood. Inbreeding gets difficult with this number of survivers.
 

Nazgul

Arachnoangel
Old Timer
Joined
Oct 17, 2003
Messages
801
Hi,

I´ve mated relatives several times (brothers and sisters and males of one offspring with the mother) and I´ve seen no effect on the brood.

Greetings
Alex
 

JacenBeers

Arachnoprince
Old Timer
Joined
Sep 1, 2002
Messages
1,264
It kinda bothers me that you are breeding children with their mothers.
 

Stormcrow

Arachnoknight
Old Timer
Joined
Nov 14, 2002
Messages
297
Most serious breeders will label each animal and catagorize them by record keeping and to prevent interbreeding.
 

Nazgul

Arachnoangel
Old Timer
Joined
Oct 17, 2003
Messages
801
Hi,

I see nothing wrong in interbreeding of invertebrates if there are no negative effects (for example in mantids it can cause problems so I wouldn´t do it). In my opinion you cannot apply terms of ethic to invertebrates that way.

For instance if you are keeping a very rare species of which you are having only a few specimens it´s the only way. An example would be that you bought a gravid wc female and only a few scorpions of the brood survived. Interbreeding is the only chance to keep a steady population. I observed no difference in the mating behaviour of relatives in comparison to non-relatives. Furtheron the broods are having the same sizes and those out of interbreeding are not less healthy. By the way, I´m labeling and catorizing each of my scorpions as well.

Greetings
Alex
 

R.F

Arachnosquire
Old Timer
Joined
Aug 10, 2004
Messages
88
Nazgul said:
Hi,

I see nothing wrong in interbreeding of invertebrates if there are no negative effects (for example in mantids it can cause problems so I wouldn´t do it). In my opinion you cannot apply terms of ethic to invertebrates that way.

For instance if you are keeping a very rare species of which you are having only a few specimens it´s the only way. An example would be that you bought a gravid wc female and only a few scorpions of the brood survived. Interbreeding is the only chance to keep a steady population. I observed no difference in the mating behaviour of relatives in comparison to non-relatives. Furtheron the broods are having the same sizes and those out of interbreeding are not less healthy. By the way, I´m labeling and catorizing each of my scorpions as well.

Greetings
Alex
Very indeed..but as with speciments that are easy to get like Androctonus australis i always take speciments from another shipment..
 
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