Okay,,being a half-wit on genetics,it seems to me when the chromsomes are lining up each chromosome from both the male and the female each has specific locations for certain developements of the chick-bird-peahen or Peacock down the road.Just as with humans,DNA inside the cell actually is what makes everything unique.Peacocks has 78 chromosomes.39 coming from each parent.
Of these 39 locations each specific to an individual trait,DNA then comes into play for the minute diffrences within same-like gened birds. Since there is 3 patterns within peacocks,pied,wild and b/s,when the chromosomes are "liing up" if one parent has the "wild-barred" pattern and another has the "black shoulder" pattern,how is it decided who wins out And what happens to the losing gene? I mean if the eventual peachick turns out to be black shoulder,it still has the barred winged pattern from the other parent. Just as blue eyes are dominate in humans,what about couples who has brown and blue eyes? Sure,most all kids would have blue eyes but the brown gene is still there. Or is it the twisted matrix of long DNA strands that decides on minute details? For me to fully understand genetics,I like the hands on type of learning which means pictures.I have yet to see a drawing of a peafowl chromosome with known "markers" indicated within that chromosome.I do understand the hen always decides the sex of the peachick. I need to do a little more catching up on reproduction and cell division before I really make myself stand out here as a bat cr-p crazy person. Much has changed and tons more knowledge is now known on genetics than what I learned back in high school decages ago.
Of these 39 locations each specific to an individual trait,DNA then comes into play for the minute diffrences within same-like gened birds. Since there is 3 patterns within peacocks,pied,wild and b/s,when the chromosomes are "liing up" if one parent has the "wild-barred" pattern and another has the "black shoulder" pattern,how is it decided who wins out And what happens to the losing gene? I mean if the eventual peachick turns out to be black shoulder,it still has the barred winged pattern from the other parent. Just as blue eyes are dominate in humans,what about couples who has brown and blue eyes? Sure,most all kids would have blue eyes but the brown gene is still there. Or is it the twisted matrix of long DNA strands that decides on minute details? For me to fully understand genetics,I like the hands on type of learning which means pictures.I have yet to see a drawing of a peafowl chromosome with known "markers" indicated within that chromosome.I do understand the hen always decides the sex of the peachick. I need to do a little more catching up on reproduction and cell division before I really make myself stand out here as a bat cr-p crazy person. Much has changed and tons more knowledge is now known on genetics than what I learned back in high school decages ago.