WyldFya said:This is one that has been on the site before, but stilll awesome
WOW amazing stand out white. I was wondering what the terms were for color morphs while reading this thread, so I looked it up. Here's some other albino and white morph animals.
USEFUL GENETIC TERMS
Abundism
Markings are more prolific than usual
Albinism
Lacking melanin, also known as amelanistic. "True" albinos entirely lack markings and have pale blue ("partial albino") or pink eyes ("true albino"), but there are many degrees of partial albino. Some forms of albino are temperature dependent e.g. the Siamese cat has a form of albinism where pigmentation develops on cooler areas of the body (the head, tail and legs) but is inhibited on the warmer parts of the body. Albinism can also occur in patches.
Anerythristic albinism
Lacking the red colour. The actual colour and pattern of the animal depends on what other colours are in the pattern. One effect might be a bluish-grey animal.
Axanthic albinism
Lacking the yellow colour. The actual colour and pattern of the animal depends on what other colours are in the pattern.
Chinchilla
The hair shaft lacks normal bands of pigment and may be pigmented only at the top. Known also as the "inhibitor" gene because it inhibits production of pigment. There is also believed to be a "wide band" gene because the hair shaft has a wide band of white.
Dilution
The colour is washed out e.g. black becomes blue (grey), red becomes cream, blue becomes lilac.
Golden
The hair-shaft has a wide band of gold. It is a combination of chinchilla or wide band and normal colouring.
Erythristic
Black pigment is converted to red.
Flavistic
Golden mutation. The overall effect is that of an pale animal photographed in sepia; all colours seem converted to shades of brown or golden-brown.
Hypermelanistic
Having excessive black and/or brown pigment (usually just referred to as melanistic)..
Hypomelanistic
Having less black and/or brown colour than normal. These animals still have some pigment and may simply look "faded".
Leucistic
Similar to albino; white, but having dark eyes, some pigmented skin and often having "ghost markings" visible in certain light.
Maltesing
Another term for dilution of black into blue.
Melanism
Abnormal amounts of black pigment.
Mosaicism
Abnormal black patches of skin cells due to cell mutations in the embryo.
Nigrism
Black markings merge into black areas.
Partial Albinism
The correct definition is an albino with some residual pigmentation e.g. dark eyes, cream fur or ghost markings. However "partial albino" is also often used to describe animals with albino patches (piebald).
Piebald
Having white patches. Note: piebald is a normal colouration in some animals, this note only applies to animals which do not normally have black or white patches. In normally dark-coloured animals white patches may be due to albinism affecting certain areas of skin; in normally light-coloured animals, black/dark brown patches may be due to melanism. The patches are due to localised mutations in skin cells during embryo development. If the mutation occurs early in development, the patches are larger. If it occurs later, the patches are smaller.
Pseudomelanism
Combination of abundism and nigrism i.e. prolific markings coalesce to hid the background colour.
Rufism
Affects the depth of the red pigment turning it from yellow-orange into deep orange-red.
True Albino
Totally lacking in pigment - white fur and skin, no markings, blue or pink eyes.
Tyrosinase-negative Albino
An albino whose cells lack tyrosinase (an enzyme which synthesises melanin), usually producing a pale yellowish or cream animal with pink-eyes.
Tyrosinase Positive Albino
An albino not able to synthesise melanin, but able to synthesise tyrosinase, often resulting in a fawn or lavender (platinum) colour. Tyrosinase positive albinism ("partial albinism") is the most common form of albinism.
Xanthic
Having more yellow colour than normal.






