rachaelandrats wrote:Why would you breed when there are so many rescues?
Also to be 'expecting' so many different things.... you should know the exact colours that the litter will produce. Not just possibly this and possibly that....
As for dwarf rats, that is not normal... so you aren't breeding healthy rats at all. That's a genetic fault.....
Dwarf rats are not a fault.... its being bred for.
As for carrying so many things, they are called recessives, they are carried. No one can tell you 100% what will be in a litter. Even if a line has been bred for black over and over, a recessive can pop up and give you a color you had no idea would be there. I say "expecting" becouse I know thats what can pop up in the litter. I may or may not get all of those traits, but I know they could be there. Im not shocked when I breed 2 rats of the same color together and get a colorful litter,etc. I know what to expect. (of course you should always expect the unexpected,lol)
As for rescues, I do take in unwanted rats and offer them a forever home (non breeding of course), but yes I do still breed. Why? Becouse my rats are healthier and live longer then a rescue rat. People get turned off if they adopt a rat and it only lives a few months,etc. . If no one bred them properlly, then all rats would die in a years time instead of a longer lifespan that breeders are breeding for.
Hairless in many places arent healthy, but Im lucky and was able to get healthy line to start and keep working with.
I plan my breeding well in advance, theres so much more to breeding then simply putting a male and female together and hoping for the best. I study the pedigrees and the rats themself before even thinking of breeding.