I work at a kennel so I see a _lot_ of dogs on a regular basis (mainly labradors since my workplace is specifically geared towards retriever-type dogs). Next shift (probably Saturday) I'll see if I can spot some differently colored noses!
...Oh Well that was nice and easy :D Since I watched the first video I've been pointing at various red dogs I see and pointing out that they have black or brown noses, nobody else seems all that interested tho :''')
So nice to see someone using liver instead of chocolate! Both are perfectly fine but its just a personal preference that hits just right. Great video! This series is so informative I love sharing them with the new learners in my arpg group ❤
I watched this yasterday when I was at my bed dying with fever and dizziness and almost falling asleep every blink and and when I woke up today I GENUINELY thought this was a fever dream 🥹 I (for obvious reasons) don't remember anything about this video and I didn't understand anything that was being said in the state I was in but now I'm going to rewatch it lol
My sister has been breeding dachshunds for 15 years, since I was 9. I could honestly make a massive pedigree (in the genetics sense), including full descriptions of colors, patterns, and coat length as well as photographs if that would be helpful to your research at all.
@@littlehungrywarrior I have the pedigree of all related dogs, links to their individual pedigrees 4 generations back each, and most of the photos set up in a Google doc folder. Still adding more photos but other than that, it's all finished. Is there a business email for the channel?
@@7337blackwolf no business email. my tumblr is in the desc, but if you don't have a tumblr or don't wish to use it, my gmail is pinkstarclan@gmail.com thanks so much again!!
I’m kind of curious, since the chocolate thing is on the same region as cats and dogs, does that mean their last common ancestor, some ancient Carnivora species like Dormaalocyon latouri, had it? Because it seems a lot more specific than something like albinism which happens even in plants and I imagine “pigment machine broke” disorder can happen in a lot of different organisms with different causes… unless albinism also originated from the common ancestor of animals and plants which if that’s true would be so wild to think about
Nope. I mean, their ancestor had the REGION, but not that mutation. it just happened to mutate separately in both species. that particular region's job involves controlling the shape of eumelanin, so it's a pretty easy mutation to mutate. albinism's the same way; it's very easy to mutate it in a lot of different ways. if the common ancestor of carnivora had liver we'd be seeing it in almost every feliform AND caniform, if not every. the same mutation, or a very very similar one, popping up in different species is super, super common - especially in domestic species. look at himalayan! rats, mice, rabbits, cats, even 2 individual dogs all independently mutated it. cats mutated two different versions of it! this is called an "analogous mutation" btw :3
Chocolate? Chocolate?! Chocolate!! CHOCOLATE!!!! *CHOCOLAAAATE!!!!!*
normally the introduction 'base colors' part is the easy stuff and modifiers complicate things... this is the opposite
man i get so hyped seeing new genetics videos in my feed, gonna get all the dog knowledge
I work at a kennel so I see a _lot_ of dogs on a regular basis (mainly labradors since my workplace is specifically geared towards retriever-type dogs). Next shift (probably Saturday) I'll see if I can spot some differently colored noses!
...Oh
Well that was nice and easy :D
Since I watched the first video I've been pointing at various red dogs I see and pointing out that they have black or brown noses, nobody else seems all that interested tho :''')
So nice to see someone using liver instead of chocolate!
Both are perfectly fine but its just a personal preference that hits just right.
Great video! This series is so informative I love sharing them with the new learners in my arpg group ❤
Little hungry warrior upload!!!!!
liver eat liver world. Liver coloured dog eats liver treats :)
It sounded better in my head
I'm currently writing a dog story so this is really helpfull.
I watched this yasterday when I was at my bed dying with fever and dizziness and almost falling asleep every blink and and when I woke up today I GENUINELY thought this was a fever dream 🥹 I (for obvious reasons) don't remember anything about this video and I didn't understand anything that was being said in the state I was in but now I'm going to rewatch it lol
GET WELL SOON FRIEND THAT IS HILARIOUS THO
My sister has been breeding dachshunds for 15 years, since I was 9. I could honestly make a massive pedigree (in the genetics sense), including full descriptions of colors, patterns, and coat length as well as photographs if that would be helpful to your research at all.
it would! thank you!! that's an incredibly kind offer!
@@littlehungrywarrior I have the pedigree of all related dogs, links to their individual pedigrees 4 generations back each, and most of the photos set up in a Google doc folder. Still adding more photos but other than that, it's all finished. Is there a business email for the channel?
@@7337blackwolf no business email. my tumblr is in the desc, but if you don't have a tumblr or don't wish to use it, my gmail is pinkstarclan@gmail.com
thanks so much again!!
NAIHABIHSH JHSBHHS) S; ANOTHER ONE LETS FUCKING GOOOOOOO our king has uploaded
These videos ruin my life (positive) because now whenever I see a dog and cat try to figure out their genes
me at the dollar store the other day being weird about someone's terrier
let's go chocolate doggos!!!!!
I’m kind of curious, since the chocolate thing is on the same region as cats and dogs, does that mean their last common ancestor, some ancient Carnivora species like Dormaalocyon latouri, had it? Because it seems a lot more specific than something like albinism which happens even in plants and I imagine “pigment machine broke” disorder can happen in a lot of different organisms with different causes… unless albinism also originated from the common ancestor of animals and plants which if that’s true would be so wild to think about
Nope. I mean, their ancestor had the REGION, but not that mutation. it just happened to mutate separately in both species. that particular region's job involves controlling the shape of eumelanin, so it's a pretty easy mutation to mutate. albinism's the same way; it's very easy to mutate it in a lot of different ways.
if the common ancestor of carnivora had liver we'd be seeing it in almost every feliform AND caniform, if not every.
the same mutation, or a very very similar one, popping up in different species is super, super common - especially in domestic species. look at himalayan! rats, mice, rabbits, cats, even 2 individual dogs all independently mutated it. cats mutated two different versions of it!
this is called an "analogous mutation" btw :3
@@littlehungrywarriorthank you for all the info, that’s really cool!
You want it worse? Sheep also have it. It's referenced to as the Brown allele but it's the same thing as cats and dogs.
YIPEEEE