I am so sorry. That is heartbreaking.Lost our little bbr girl to a preditor yesterdayThink it was a feral cat.![]()
Lanae
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I am so sorry. That is heartbreaking.Lost our little bbr girl to a preditor yesterdayThink it was a feral cat.![]()
Oh Kass, I'm so so sorry!Lost our little bbr girl to a preditor yesterdayThink it was a feral cat.![]()
Lost our little bbr girl to a preditor yesterdayThink it was a feral cat.![]()
It is your choice ultimately. But it would be best if, instead of relocating, you just had her euthanized. You see, she knows how to find food in your area, where shelter and water are. If you were to relocate her, she would likely perish from starvation. TNR feral cats I trapped were always returned to the location they were trapped at, but these were managed colonies. Plus, her life already hangs in the balance as a feral. Disease, fights, starvation, etc. tend to kill them in a few short years. I know if I trapped a cat who had a lot of scars, it was almost always going to test positive for feline leukemia, which causes a slow death, but is spread through blood and saliva, which happens during a fight.Thanks for the bait info, I am going to live trap, and relocate her.
Feline leporsy is rampant in our area. Yes disease starvation and predation are big concerns, but I was relocating to the animal shelter (pound) where at least she will be euthanized humanely. The only gun I have is a .22 pellet gun and doubt I could shoot a cat anyway, but not sure about where to get a clean shot for instant death. Even if I knew still doubt I could do it, and there is no way in this world my husband could or would.It is your choice ultimately. But it would be best if, instead of relocating, you just had her euthanized. You see, she knows how to find food in your area, where shelter and water are. If you were to relocate her, she would likely perish from starvation. TNR feral cats I trapped were always returned to the location they were trapped at, but these were managed colonies. Plus, her life already hangs in the balance as a feral. Disease, fights, starvation, etc. tend to kill them in a few short years. I know if I trapped a cat who had a lot of scars, it was almost always going to test positive for feline leukemia, which causes a slow death, but is spread through blood and saliva, which happens during a fight.
Not all traits are simple follow Mendelian genetics with complete dominance/recessiveness so maybe the legs are inherited by some other genetic process, ie incomplete dominance, codominance, or multiple alleles, etc?I'm going to jump in here again, because now I've been doing Punnett squares all morning! The only way I can get this to work out as described above is if the willow (id+) is recessive, and the yellow (Id) is dominant. The gene notation indicates this too. So a male willow would be id+id+ and a female yellow would be Id. Does this make sense to anyone else?
Kirsten
Feline leporsy is rampant in our area. Yes disease starvation and predation are big concerns, but I was relocating to the animal shelter (pound) where at least she will be euthanized humanely. The only gun I have is a .22 pellet gun and doubt I could shoot a cat anyway, but not sure about where to get a clean shot for instant death. Even if I knew still doubt I could do it, and there is no way in this world my husband could or would.
And sex linked genetics, can't forget those sometimes tricky buggers! A punnet square is only useful when a trait is simple dominant/recessive. Any more complicated, and well, it isn't a good option.Not all traits are simple follow Mendelian genetics with complete dominance/recessiveness so maybe the legs are inherited by some other genetic process, ie incomplete dominance, codominance, or multiple alleles, etc?