You don't consider 'sickle cell anemia' and 'Haemophilia' to be genetic deformities? Mind you the royals getting these disorders can't really be linked to inbreeding, as the Haemophilia seems to have been the result of a spontaneous mutation in Queen Victoria, I forget where they picked up the sickle cell though.
You don't consider 'sickle cell anemia' and 'Haemophilia' to be genetic deformities? Mind you the ro
first generation inbreeding does have a chance of anomalies but is extremely rare. It becomes common when is multiple generations if inbreeding, that's why the first couple of incestual generations on old kingdoms where juat regular people, but after 200 years of inbreeding you got cases like the classic Charles II of spain
first generation inbreeding does have a chance of anomalies but is extremely rare. It becomes common
Exactly. The underlying issue with inbreeding is the degradation in DNA strength overtime. That doesn't mean much on the surface but in theory it basically means a slight shortening of lifespan, at perhaps an exponential rate per amount of generations the inbreeding occurs, for gratuitous reasons. Those reasons result in the side effects people stereotype and often ONLY will lead to deformities because it messes with DNA. You'd have to be something like a genetic engineer to understand exactly what changes with the DNA strands though.
Just learned about you tonight btw but, glad you're back! C: your art vaguely reminds me of old Gavalanche from dA
Exactly. The underlying issue with inbreeding is the degradation in DNA strength overtime. That does