**
Now it is getting difficult for me to discuss heavy material in another language then my own
I'l do my best anyways
**
As i clearified my personal point of view on breeding a weaker varieaty of a species,
what is the case with albinism.
Albino's aren't as hardy as the normal version,
noticable here as well.
It is a disorder in wich both parents got to possess the gene for albinism to get albino offspring.
Only when mating 2 albino's there is a chance of 100% of getting albino offspring.
To reach this again after outbreeding, there have to be heterozygous steps between that.
Nobody will be able to see that it has some kind of disorder but it IS there.
Now as this line spreads trough the hobby, there might be a point where i am not certain if i got a healthy frog so to speak.
Resulting in more and more albino's, surpressing the original form.
That is what i mean, do whatever you please as long as it is clear what is what.
So far a personal concern
To the problems of outbreeding;
When for example a colony excists with lots of the same genes trough inbred,
there is a possibility that those genes are evolved to the specific area.
The animals might be resistant to types of disease for example.
When outbreeding those animals, you can take away the resistence and make them prone to the threats they created a specific genetic against.
Another possibility is that for example an isolated colony evolves it;s genetics in a different way then another colony does.
This way the genetics can become less and less matchable,
resulting in bad offspring.
As i see it, a captive population can be seen as an isolated colony.
Putting in genes from another colony can cause problems in the missmatching genes.
As an albino form is something created trough excessive inbreeding,
putting in a wild form can mean their genes don't match the way they used to anymore.
Altough there is a possibility that the line of inbred isn't in an advanced stage,
but then again, i don't like the idea of not visible but genetical incorrect specimens getting into my breeding groups.
My guess would be that the albino genes are closely related to the ones that are responsible for the high mortality within this form.
Mother nature cures itself, so to speak.
In nature not much albino's survive for long time since they are not as healthy as the "normal" of their kind are, they got multiple disadvantages as well.
When outbreeding succeeds you got to select the genetic disorder again in order to get albino's again.
You are picking out the animals with a genetic disorder and breed them along again.
As soon as you get the "pure" albino again they are also teased by bad genetics.
The same genetics that were in the first frog you tried to improve, since the normal form isn't able to provide a different set of genes on that part of the DNA.
In my point of view, little chance you can improve a malfunction of the genetics while keeping the disorder![]()