- Joined
- Mar 7, 2012
- Messages
- 4,100
I would never deliberately breed such close relatives, even if they were mature at the same time.I was talkin to a T keeper at the local exotics store and uhm.. well he said he kept babies from his female a genic and got some males and bred one to her..
Does T inbreeding affect the babies??
While I am not aware of any research on the effects of inbreeding in tarantulas, we know generally that prolonged inbreeding often has detrimental effects on animals. This is why so many animals have reproductive/dispersal strategies that help to reduce inbreeding. (For example, male spiders generally mature faster than their female sac-mates.)
It’s unclear what effect inbreeding has on spiders or how many generations of inbreeding they can tolerate before things go awry. Anecdotally, some have observed problems after three generations of inbreeding. (However, there are some tarantula species whose domestic stock are all descended from a small number of imported spiders, and no one has noticed any problems that have been definitively attributed to inbreeding.)
While they are not spiders, I have noticed with my mealworms that after several generations of inbreeding, I started seeing a lot of bad molts. Adding a cup of fresh mealworms seems to have solved this problem. EulersK noticed a similar issue with his dubia colony, which was resolved by adding new males.
Here's some anecdotal evidence. About a year ago, my dubia colony started going downhill. Males maturing with no wings, dwarfism running rampant, females with no antenna, and so on. That colony of tens of thousands is the result of two breeding pairs that I got for free a few years ago. The inbreeding started to catch up. Luckily, a small influx of a few dozen males every year keeps those issues at bay. It doesn't take much to mix up the genetic pool, is what I'm saying.