Axolotl Colours
Axolotl Colours
Axolotl Colours
Here is a quick guide to axolotl colours, what they are called and a brief guide to their genetics. But first you need to understand the different
pigments and the notation involved.
There are 3 main types of pigment cells: melanophores that produce a brown/black pigment, xanthaphores that produce a yellow/orange
pigment, and iridophores that produce a shiney reflective pigment.
Genes always act in pairs, so genes are written as “X/X” to show the 2 different parts. Genes can be dominant, written as a capital letter, and
recessive which is written as a lower case letter. Dominant genes are apparent in an animal’s colouring, recessive genes only show when there
is a matching pair of recessive genes. Animals inherit one gene from each parent at the point of fertilisation.
Harlequin Harlequins are leucistic that show black and yellow patches, often
in random abstract patterns. This is thought to be caused by an
incomplete expression of the pattern restriction of the leucistic
gene, meaning that the colours show through.
Chimera These animals are technically mosaics, where they actually have
2 different sets of genes in one body. It usually shows as the
animal being different colours on each half. The most common
combination is wildtype/leucistic, but can occur with any 2
colours.