I really doubt that. The color really almost has no difference when they are adults. Leta lone babies which show no identification of sex until they are much bigger.
You just have a mix of hybrids. It will be very hard to figure out which is a male/female unless you vent them, or just wait until they breed.
I would agree with that idea. Now my next question is, would the color indicate sex in hybrids like these? At first I thought the browns may be female and the yellows male, but now I'm not sure about that. Any ideas?
It looks to me, that the male is a red zebra, and the female is a red zebra/electric yellow hybrid. So the reason half of them are brown and half are yellow...
They are definitely hybrids. but they are 3/4th red zebras. Im guessing the browns are reds, and the yellows are the electric yellow part.
I really doubt that. The color really almost has no difference when they are adults. Leta lone babies which show no identification of sex until they are much bigger.
You just have a mix of hybrids. It will be very hard to figure out which is a male/female unless you vent them, or just wait until they breed.
Gl with your babies.
P00nedxp 2 years ago
I would agree with that idea. Now my next question is, would the color indicate sex in hybrids like these? At first I thought the browns may be female and the yellows male, but now I'm not sure about that. Any ideas?
natezimm 2 years ago
It looks to me, that the male is a red zebra, and the female is a red zebra/electric yellow hybrid. So the reason half of them are brown and half are yellow...
They are definitely hybrids. but they are 3/4th red zebras. Im guessing the browns are reds, and the yellows are the electric yellow part.
Just my 2 cents.
P00nedxp 2 years ago