• @HorreC
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      11 month ago

      I thought that was only during development, but by the time you are viable you are just riding on the dominate one. But this is all armchair understanding of these subjects.

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        31 month ago

        Nope. The egg starts dividing before the deactivation of the extra X, and that propagates.

        For instance: In cats, a big part of their skin pigmentation is controlled by the X chromosome. Which is why you’ll only find female calico cats. Males only carry the one X and can only manifest one color pattern.

        • @HorreC
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          31 month ago

          just to be contrarian I had a male calico, and I also had a female orange (full) cat. But I get your meaning and I think I was saying the same thing. The skin is doing its thing long before the other X is decided which would then set a lot of the bones and features that I think get set after one has shut down (sorry if it came off like I didnt mean this).

          • @[email protected]
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            fedilink
            31 month ago

            Your male calico is likely intersex XXY. very rare.

            Sorry, I had indeed misinterpreted your previous comment. Thanks for clarifying.

            • @HorreC
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              21 month ago

              It was only a small eraser sized grey dot in a other wise orange tabby white mix. His name was Ru after Ru-paul and he was fabulous.