Guppy Color Strains
Guppy Color Strains
Guppy Color Strains
Third Edition
June 2012
v | Table of Contents
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
ISBN 978-0-9865700-0-1
Guppy Color STrainS | v
Contents
Preface
13
1 Moscows 17
The Moscow in the Rest of the World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Moscow Color and Genetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Breeding the Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Blue Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Albino Blue Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Blond Blue Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
Asian Blau Blue Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Golden Blue Moscow. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
Green Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Purple Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Full Red Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Half-Black Red Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Albino Full Red Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Golden Red Moscow. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Midnight Black Moscow
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
Albino Midnight Black . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Golden Midnight Black . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Half Black Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
Stoerzbach Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Pink White Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
vi | Table of Contents
2 Metal Heads 45
Cobra Metal Heads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Yellow Cobra Metal Head . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Red Cobra Metal Head Roundtail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
Black Cobra Metal Head . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
Red Metal Head Mosaic
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Lace Metal Heads . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Red Lace Metal Head. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Orange Metal Head Fantail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Yellow Lace Metal Head Fantail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Yellow Metal Head Doublesword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
Yellow Lace Metal Head Speartail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
3 Snakeskins 53
Common Names. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
Snakeskin Guppy History . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54
The Pattern. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
Snakeskin Variations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
The Lace Snakeskin Genetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Zebrinus or Bar Genetics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
Yellow Cobra Snakeskin Roundtail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
Albino Yellow Cobra Snakeskin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
Guppy Color STrainS | vii
4 Magentas 81
Long Fin Silverado. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Short Fin Silverado . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
Blue Silverado. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Full Gold Magenta Moscow. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Blond Magenta Moscow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
Albino Full Red Magenta (Pink) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
Albino Metallic Magenta Ribbon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
Flamenco Dancer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
Peacock . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
Magenta Metal Lace Cobra . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
Medusa Roundtail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
Platinum Medusa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
European Spadetail Medusa . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
Blue Galaxy. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
Red Galaxy Fantail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
White Galaxy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
European Magenta Galaxy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
Yellow Grass Galaxy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Blue Grass Galaxy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
Santa Maria . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 101
Albino Red Santa Maria . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 103
6 Grass 105
Blue Grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 107
Red Grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Albino Red Grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109
Albino Full Red Grass. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
Yellow Grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
Purple Grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
Silver Grass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 111
12 Stoerzbach 159
Stoerzbach Metal Swordtail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 159
Pied Blue Guppy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 163
13 Micarifs 165
Orange Micarif . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 168
Preface
his book has been twelve years in the making and has had previous
incarnations.
It now includes over 150 strains. It’s accuracy, in terms of correctly
identifying the genes involved in each of the strains, has been steadily
improving because I have done many of the crosses myself.
My goal throughout the last twelve years is to provide guppy breed-
ers with a reliable reference source. Some will use the collection to
identify guppies they acquired but whose genetics they do not know.
Others will use the book to ind out how to breed speciic strains.
Some strains can be fairly complex and require basic knowledge of
their genotype to maintain them. Still others will use the book to
ind strains they are interested in breeding.
he guppy breeder interested in crossing experiments will ind that
many combinations of color genes have already been created and re-
ined. I have grouped many variants of basic strains together to make
the collection useful. For example, you can see what a White Half-
Black Pastel looks like, then the blond white and yellow variants.
I have also provided a lot of breeding tips for speciic strains, includ-
ing tips for developing speciic strains for the judging bench. Where
the gene makeup of the strain is complex I provide basic information
about how to keep all those genes intact.
Classiication System
here is no good way to absolutely categorize guppies into strains,
where a strain is deined as a truebreeding guppy that produces sons
and daughters that are 80% similar. An example is a Panda Moscow,
a guppy with both Moscow with the Pink mutations (Fig.1).
he Panda belongs to both Moscow and Pink categories.
In loosely grouping guppies in this book, I start of with a rule that
says certain strains have dominant traits that are strictly Y-linked.
14 | preface
hen there is the “Blond Glass Belly Panda,” which combines the
blond, Glass Belly, Pink and Moscow mutations (Fig.2 ). his is a
guppy that belongs to three diferent categories. I know it is entirely
arbitrary, but I think of the Blond and Glass Belly traits as “modiier”
traits because they are autosomal and tend to afect the whole body
uniformly. So I have made the Blond Glass Belly Panda a variant of
the Panda and the Panda is grouped with the Pink mutation guppies.
he Color Strains book has split many of the old groupings into
smaller groupings. For example, the Mg (Metallic Gold) gene has
now got its own chapter.
I have nothing to recommend my arbitrary classiications other than
the fact that they may be of some use to breeders examining strains
of unknown genotype. Or more simply the classiication system
makes this book easier to read from beginning to end. In fact fancy
guppies are usually an arbitrary concoction of genes, selected for aes-
thetic appeal and perpetuated through the habit of selective breeding
and the assignment of such names as “Flamenco Dancer.”
here are so-called “base body” classiication systems. Classiication
Guppy Color STrainS | 15
systems like these have to do with phenotype, what you see. My work
with the microscope examining color on the cellular level shows that
what you think you see with your naked eye is not necessarily what
you actually see with the aid of the microscope. he microscope is
much more accurate. And if you had tools that could make observa-
tions on the molecular level, your observations would be that much
more accurate again. Good theories rest on accurate observations. he
designer is interested in genotype, the actual genes that are deter-
mining the appearance of the guppy.
I record the genotype for many of the strains in this book. Ultimately
this is the most accurate way to identify guppies.
You will ind a guide to the system of notation I use for genotype in
Appendix A: Gene Symbols.
I recommend that you buy he heory and Practice of Guppy Breeding
as a companion to this book. It will make understanding the genetics
sections a lot easier. And I include a wide array of breeding strategies
and advice on designing breeding programs. Neither book stands on
its own.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank the photographers for their excellent photo-
16 | preface
1 Moscows
he irst Moscows to ind their way to Germany looked like what we now call “Metal Heads.”
Blue Moscow
GENETICS
he guppy pictured here has genetics typical of Blue Moscows, that
is a Y-linked Moscow gene and X-linked blue genes. To modify the
blue color, outcross to an American solid blue delta, or another strain
with a lot of blue color.
he Blue Moscow has a black layer of color cells underneath a
blue-light relecting iridophore layer. See the Color Manual for how
the Tyndal Blue efect works. What this means is that black modi-
ier genes and iridophore modifying genes will afect the depth and
intensity of blue.
Good outcross females to modify the blue include American blues
and Japanese blue strains.
24 | Moscows
his is a Blue Moscow with the albino gene. Notice how pale the
blue is when you remove the black layer genetically. A good plan to
enhance the blue color in grey Blues would be to breed albino Blue
Moscows for blue color and then cross to a grey Blue strain.
his Blue Moscow variant has no red color cells and has an overall
greenish blue color.
GENETICS
he red color cells in the body are converted to iridescent blue, giving
26 | Moscows
the strain its bluish green color. A Blue Moscow was used to cre-
ate this strain. You can see an intense blue area at the bottom of the
peduncle. his is where a red spot on the parental strain is located.
he genotype is: XYMw AbAb
Where Mw = Moscow, Ab = Asian Blau
See the Guppy Color Manual for an in-depth discussion of the efect
of the golden gene on black in guppies and particularly in Moscows.
Green Moscow
Purple Moscow
Red Moscow. Picture courtesy of ATFG. his male has the high dorsal gene as well.
Moscow Red. Guppy by Hiroshi Nishimura. Bluish coloring comes from the Moscow. It is from a
cross between a Blue Moscow male and American Full Red female.
A Full Red Moscow is Y-linked for the Moscow gene and X-linked
for Full Red. It is created by crossing these two strains. Presumably
the red color gene can cross over to the Y chromosome to create a
Full Red Moscow with the key genes on the Y chromosome.
A strategy for creating Red Moscows from other Moscows is to
maintain two strains, the Moscow strain and Full Red strain X-
linked for the Full Red gene. (X-linked females will display red color
in their ins and at the top of their peduncles.) Maintain the Full Red
females pure while constantly outcrossing the Moscow strain until it
has become pure Full Red.
Takahiro Mizuguchi, who has been working with Moscows since the
mid-nineties, says the original Blue Moscow strain he acquired came
out of Eastern Europe. He says there was a lot of red color pigment
in the original import stock. Crossing red guppies into the Blue
Moscow enhanced the red pigment. Crossing with American delta
blues fades out the red.
I do not particularly like this version of the Full Red.
30 | Moscows
his version of the Red Moscow has an intense red coloration with a
solid red caudal and dorsal in.
his strain combines the Moscow, Golden and Full Red genes.
Two tone Onyx Black Moscow. Guppy and photo by Philip Shaddock
he Half Black Moscow has a very dark body that does not fade.
he black on the body tends to be a duller, bluer black than regular
Moscow Blues. he fact that the black does not fade indicates that
it is a diferent black modiier gene then the Moscow black gene.
It is undoubtedly the gene that colors the half-black body area in
half-blacks. It is autosomal. I have given the gene the name “Onyx”
to distinguish it from the sex-linked half-black gene. (Dr. Berríos
originally came up with this name.)
he guppy pictured above came out of a cross between a Hawaiian
Blue male and a HB Green female. He is an F2 generation male.
he cross produced both dark in males and light in males. All the
females have dark ins. he picture illustrating this entry shows a
light in Onyx. At this point in its development, the ins are more
yellow and black than green or blue. hese are colors that come from
both sides of the cross.
BODY GENETICS
he particular version of the half-black Moscow is very black. he
deep blackness of this strain is inherited from the original female
mother (Half-Black Green). he deep blackness of the females sug-
gests that the HB Green line had the NII variation of the half-black
allele. (See the Guppy Color Manual.)
he half-black gene seems to help make the guppy more black than a
non-half-black Moscow. However, the blackness may not be entirely
due to the half-black gene, as an autosomal gene making the guppy
black (MBEG) may contribute to the darkness. See the Midnight
Black Moscow entry for a discussion of the genetics of a similar Black
Moscow imported from hailand.
It is probably the case that the ins appear to be lighter because they
are contrasted against a very dark body. However, with that said, it is
true that the ins are under the inluence of separate color genes. See
the Leopard Moscow entry for a Moscow with snakeskin ins.
36 | Moscows
Stoerzbach Moscow
Young Stoerzbach Moscow. his is the same guppy as shown above. Guppy and photo Philip Shad-
dock.
he strain has two types, a yellow version and a yellow green version.
Both versions become green metallic when they mature. he yel-
low color seen in this strain may be from the original Blue Moscow
strain.
GENETICS
his strain descended from a cross between a guppy with the Stoerz-
bach autosomal recessive gene and a Blue Moscow.
What’s interesting about this cross is that the Blue Moscow pheno-
Guppy Color STrainS | 37
Pink White Moscow. Guppy and Photo by Philip Shaddock. 3.5 Months Old
Female with the Pink White trait at the base of the caudal in.
38 | Moscows
Carnation Moscow
his guppy is F1 of a cross between a Midnight Black Moscow and a
Blue Grass guppy.
2 Metal Heads
he snakeskin gene readily crosses over, and since the snakeskin body
and ins genes are close together, a Metal Head strain may be fully
Y-linked.
X YMw Sst Ssb
Because the snakeskin body and in genes are separate, it is also pos-
sible to have other patterns associated with the ins.
I have arbitrarily divided the Metal Heads into Cobra and Lace
varieties. See the Snakeskin chapter for more detail on cobra and lace
snakeskins.
Guppy Color STrainS | 47
his guppy combines the red snakeskin, Blue Moscow and the
roundtail genes. he putative genetics of the strain are:
XRdt Sst Ssb YRndt Mw
Where Rdt = Red tail, Sst = snakeskin ins, Ssb = snakeskin body, Rndt = Roundtail, Mw = Moscow
Black Cobra Platinum Metal Head. Guppy and photo by Buncha Silskulsuk.
his guppy has a heavy black color with cobra snakeskin markings
and a black Moscow front of body. It combines a Midnight Black
guppy with a snakeskin guppy.
GENETICS
Here is the putative genotype:
XYMw Ssb Sst
Where Mw = Moscow, Ssb = Snakeskin body, Sst = Snakeskin Fins
he breeder, ATFG, calls this a Metal Red Mosaic. Picture used with permission.
his variation incorporates the fantail and mosaic tail genes and red
tail gene. It’s putative genetics would be:
XMo Rdt Fa YMw Ssb Sst
Where Mo = mosaic tail, Rdt = red tail, Mw = Moscow, Ssb = snakeskin body, Sst = snakeskin ins,
Fa = fantail
Photo by ATFG.
50 | Metal Heads
his variation has an overall orange color. It has the Asian fantail
shape.
Yellow Lace Metal Head. Picture and guppy ATFG. his variant has an Asian style fantail caudal
in.
he front of the body is Blue Moscow and the rest of the body is Yel-
low Lace. he Fantail gene has created the fantail shaped caudal in.
3 Snakeskins
Yellow Cobra snakeskin. he vertical bars in the peduncle give this strain its “cobra” moniker.
Common Names
he guppy with a chain link or lace pattern on the body is known by
diferent names around the world.
In Europe it is widely known as “iligran” which is German for “lace”
or “iligree.” he term iligran is used in Michael Dzwillo’s 1959
paper “Genetische Untersuchungen an Domestizierten Stammen von
Lebistes reticulatus (Peters).” his was the irst formal description of
the snakeskin.
Previous to the Dzwillo paper, snakeskins were also known as the
“English lacetail,” and may have descended from those bred by W.G.
Phillips, the famous guppy judge and creator of the irst modern
guppy standard.
In North America it is known as the snakeskin.
In Asia, the terms snakeskin, lace, cobra and king cobra are used.
he term “cobra” is widely used to describe a guppy with the vertical
pattern in the peduncle. According to the Asian conformance guppy
judge Derrick Tan, the deining characteristics of the family are the
chain like pattern and vertical bars in the peduncle.
For judging purposes, the tail pattern will determine if the guppy is
a snakeskin or lace, with the lace having iner spots, and the coarse
snakeskin having larger spots and some iner spots. Apparently the
term “king cobra” is applied to snakeskins with black “eye spots” on
the body.
In this book I will call a snakeskin with a ine detailed, interconnect-
ed pattern a “lace tail” or a “lace guppy” or a “lace snakeskin.” If the
body also has a coarse pattern I will call it a cobra or coarse pattern
snakeskin. I consider the distinction quite arbitrary and only use it
for descriptive convenience.
Figure 2. Wild “snake” guppy. his photo appears on the University of California, Berkeley web-
site in an educational page on microevolution. (http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evosite/
evo101/IVB1bInthelab.shtml).
Leopard. hey apparently were greenish, with short clear dorsals and
coarse snakeskin markings. his description conforms to the pictures
we show of the earliest snakeskins.
W.G. Phillips may properly been seen not as the inventor of the
snakeskin, but the irst breeder to actively select for it and bring it up
to show standards.
In Guppy Handbook by C.W. Emmens (1970) the author has a picture
of a topsword guppy developed by Dr. Eduard Schmidt (who later
changed his name to Schmidt-Focke).
he guppy is called a “Lace” topsword guppy. he caption says,
referring to the breeder Eduard Schmidt, “It is believed that his ish
became the base for the King Cobra and English Lace guppies. “
old enough to have been around at the time, says that it is likely that
Schmidt got what were called “Black Lace” snakeskins from W.G.
Phillips. What Duncan was suggesting is that the background color
in the Schmidt snakeskins was black. In any event the irst scientiic
description of the half-black pattern occur ed in 1947 (O. Nybelin).
(NYBELIN, O. 1947 Ett fall av X-bunden nedärvning hos Lebistes
reticulatus (Peters). Zoologiska Bidrag fran Uppsala 25:448-454.)
Mike Reed in the May, 1965 issue of Tropical Fish Hobbyist (TFH
p. 69) attributes the “King Cobra Guppy” to the Mac Guppy Hatch-
ery in Long Island City, New York. According to the article, the
strain began with a three-quarter black male with “unusual” mark-
ings. (his must have been a guppy half-black and snakeskin hy-
brid.) It was imported by Paul Hähnel and handed to a Mr. Reitz.
He worked with it for some time and then passed it on to the Mac
Guppy Hatchery. According to the wife of the owner of Mac Guppy
Hatchery, Paula Kalichstein, the guppy was named for its King Co-
bra snake markings. Apparently 55 tanks were devoted to the project
over 18 months.
The Pattern
he snakeskin pattern can be described as islands of black color cells
(melanophores) in a sea of platinum (iridophores). Figure 6 shows a
close-up of the region of skin on a snakeskin spanning the tail (on
the left) and peduncle (on the right).
he darker areas are the islands of melanophores and the lighter areas
are the iridophores. A microscope image illustrates this even better.
Guppy Color STrainS | 59
Snakeskin Variations
Guppy color cells exist in layers, with melanophores at the bottom,
iridiphores (light relecting color cells) in the middle and the yellow
and red pigment color cells (xantho-erythrophores) on the topmost
layer.
he pigment color cells can give the snakeskin an overall yellow, red,
green, black or other color tone he color of the light relected by
iridophores can also afect the color. You see a lot of blue color in the
picture above of the snakeskin skin, which means the relecting iri-
dophores has given this strain a lot of blue color. he blue mixes with
60 | Snakeskins
yellow pigment color to give the guppy a green color cast. (Again, see
the Color Manual for a detailed description of guppy color.)
Because the color cells can be under the inluence of so many dif-
ferent genes, snakeskin patterns can be quite variable. he hobby
does not really have the language to describe all the possible per-
mutations, both in terms of color or the ineness or coarseness
of the pattern, indeed whether it is in a stripe or spot formation.
Figure 9. Lace Snakeskin Photo by Philip Shaddock. his particular strain also has a inely detailed
pattern on the body.
GENETICS
he snakeskin gene is dominant over the wild type. Female snake-
skins crossed with male Moscows have snakeskin peduncles and
snakeskin ins and are called “Metal Heads.” he half-black gene
makes the peduncle area of snakeskins black and the ins become
a dot pattern, creating a guppy Asians call the Dragon guppy. he
Stoerzbach, Metallic Gold, magenta and possibly other autosomal
metal genes cause the snakeskin pattern to be completely or almost
completely suppressed, producing a blue or yellow metallic pheno-
type, often with spotted ins. An example is the Mikarif guppy. (See
the chapter on the Mikarif.) he platinum gene and other Y-linked
genes afecting iridophores cause a modiied snakeskin pattern. Lace
patterns become cobra, often with zebrinus bars in the peduncle. he
half-tuxedo pattern splits the peduncle area horizontally into a upper
half of black and a bottom half of platinum yellow.
he basis for all these changes may be in how these genes afect the
interaction of color cells. How color cells interact with each other
on close contact is a major determinant of animal patterns. It will
be shown that many of the genes that we commonly talk about as
pattern genes afect the way color cells repulse, attract or suppress
62 | Snakeskins
Figure 10. he guppy has a ine lace pattern on the body and a really coarse pattern on the ins.
Indeed the Ssb and Sst genes can be separated entirely. You can have a
snakeskin body and solid color ins, or vice versa. he Japanese Grass
Guppy Color STrainS | 63
strain may be a solid body guppy with “snakeskin” ins. I put the
word snakeskin in quotation marks because the actual genes involved
may not be adequately described by the single term “snakeskin” (or
“iligran” or “cobra”).
Again, the most comprehensive reference here is the Color Manual
which goes into a great detail about so-called snakeskin genetics. But
I can summarize it here by saying that the idea that patterns in ani-
mals are due to single genes has long been shown by scientists to be
oversimpliied to the point of being incorrect. In fact patterns are due
to multiple genes participating in gene networks. Here is an example
illustrating what I mean.
Nobody in the hobby would consider the Magenta gene to be a
snakeskin gene. Yet the presence of the Magenta mutated gene in a
strain causes the snakeskin gene to behave very oddly. It produces
a phenotype that varies in the expression of the pattern, like the
“Peacock” guppy I produced by crossing a Magenta Moscow with an
X-linked snakeskin. he F1 male of the cross is sown in Figure 11.
Figure 11. Peacock guppy, the result of a Magenta Moscow X Snakeskin female cross.
So this brings us back to the discussion of the lace and coarse snake-
skin genetics. Is there a “lace” gene? Is there a “coarse” gene?
Since guppies with the bar pattern in the peduncle often show up in
snakeskin strains, and a strain can produce both barred and unbarred
males, it must be the case that the Zebrinus pattern is similar to the
Lace pattern in being due to a gene that afects the relationship be-
tween melanophores and iridophores. Of course, in modern genetic
terms, the correct way of saying this is that the Zebrinus gene most
code for an allele that afects the relationship between melanophores
and xanthophores, and that allele is part of a network of genes af-
fecting the contact between color cells at the local level. here is no
Zebrinus gene that creates a bar pattern on the peduncle in a top-
down fashion.
Violet Phang, a scientist in Singapore studying guppy genetics, pub-
lished a paper describing the vertical pattern in snakeskin strains as
Guppy Color STrainS | 65
Black Snakeskin
by a sea of platinum.
Notice that the female has black ins.
GENETICS
he black snakeskin is the result of a cross with a Midnight Black
Moscow. he autosomal black gene is enhancing the black pigment
in melanophores.
Where Sst = snakeskin ins, Ssb = snakeskin body, Ds = doublesword X and Y genes, A = Japan Blue
Doublesword Japan Blue Snakeskin. Photo by Finn Bindeballe from the Dansk Guppy Club, fall
2007
Upper Sword Snakeskin. Photo taken at a Danish guppy show by Finn Bindeballe
GENETICS
his guppy has both the gene for the snakeskin body (Ssb) and ins
(Sst).
Green / Yellow Lace Snakeskin. Photo by Philip Shaddock Luke Roebuck was the source. He called it
a “Kaden Lace Snakeskin.”
Purple Snakeskin
ATFG’s High Dorsal Red Lace Snakeskin. his is the grey version. his strain includes the high
76 | Snakeskins
dorsal gene.
ATFG has added the glass belly gene to a Red Lace Snakeskin
which also has the swallow gene modifying its ins.
4 Magentas
A particularly striking example of the use of the Magenta gene to create guppy beauty. Guppy and
photo by my friend Dr. José René Meléndez Berríos.
color wheel shows how the quality of magenta changes from purple
to magenta depending on how you mix blue and red light.
One of the reasons why the Blue Moscow shows a lot of purple or
magenta color is the presence of lots of blue iridophores in the skin.
(he blue color of Blue Moscows is due to blue light-relecting irido-
phores.) he more blue the Moscow is, and the more red color cells
it has, the more intense the Magenta mutation becomes. he color is
also due to the amount of yellow that is converted to red. hus in a
drop you can have a variation from little magenta to a lot.
When a snakeskin strain incorporates the Magenta gene the Ma-
genta gene creates a blue metallic guppy with spotted ins. here can
also be individuals who partially express the snakeskin pattern in the
body.
Genetics
he gene is autosomal dominant (M/-). his means the Magenta
phenotype emerges in the irst generation of a cross. All that is re-
quired for its expression is a single allele.
he Magenta gene afects the length of the ins. his suggests that
the gene directly or indirectly afects the iridophores.
Guppy Color STrainS | 83
Shown are the long in and short in versions. hese were brothers.
he strain descended from a Full Gold Flamenco Dancer imported
from Singapore. he female was bred to an Hawaiian Blue Moscow.
he Moscow had a Metallic Gold (Mg) gene. In about 1 in 50 fry, a
Silverado male was born. hey were selected and inbred to produce
the Silverado phenotype.
GENETICS
he Metallic Gold (Mg) gene produces a combination of silver iri-
dophores and yellow color cells. he Magenta gene then removes the
yellow color cells. A silver iridophore guppy results.
It’s genotype is as follows:
Blue Silverado
Guppy and Photo: Philip Shaddock. he guppy is only 2 1/2 months old.
his is a Magenta Moscow with the blond allele (called gold in the
U.S.).
GENETICS
he genotype for this strain is:
XYMw bb M/-
Where Mw = Moscow, b = blond, M = Magenta. he dash indicates the strain can be heterozygous or
homozygous for the Magenta allele, since the Magenta allele is autosomal dominant.
Guppy Color STrainS | 87
Flamenco Dancer
he Flamenco Dancer is a name given to the gene combination: Ma-
genta + Moscow. he Flamenco Dancer has a blue to purple metallic
body and red mottled ins. he strain has poor shaped ins. he poor
in shape must be due to the Magenta allele’s color interaction in the
ins.
GENETICS
he key to understanding the color of this strain is found in the
introduction to this chapter. Basically the magenta color is a combi-
nation of blue iridophores and orangey red color cells. Yellow color
cells are converted to orangey red. Some other red color cells may
also be present. In Franz Peter’s strain there is fewer red color cells
in the body and more blue iridophores. he reverse is true of the ins.
Guppy Color STrainS | 89
Peacock
his guppy incorporates the Magenta and snakeskin genes. he two
genes are both expressed to diferent degrees in areas of the body.
here is snakeskin on the belly and ins. he ins express both the
snakeskin pattern and the red magenta color. here is red magenta
color across the top of the guppy.
You would never guess this is a snakeskin. But there is a clue. See the
magenta color showing on the guppy’s back? he Japanese breeder
of this ish, Junichi Ito, tells me that without the Magenta gene this
guppy appears as a metal lace snakeskin.
| 91
he Medusa phenotype resulting from a cross between a Schimmelpfennig Platinum male and
snakeskin female.
I have done this cross and discovered that a Medusa phenotype ap-
pears in the irst generation of the cross. It has the genotype:
XLa Ssb SstYSc
Where La = lace; Ssb = Snakeskin body; Sst = Snakeskin ins; Sc = Schimmelpfennig Platinum
Tsutsui said that the Galaxy was the result of a crossover. So the
crossover of one or more snakeskin genes, or the lace gene, may be
the key to Galaxy genetics.
I have written a very thorough discussion about my crossing experi-
ments in quest of producing the Galaxy guppy phenotype. It was
published as a scientiic article for the journal AACL (Aquaculture,
Aquarium, Conservation and Legislation). It can be found on the
web by entering “Deciphering the Galaxy Guppy phenotype” +
AACL as your search terms.
It is a case history in identifying and reproducing well-known guppy
phenotypes.
Guppy Color STrainS | 93
Medusa
pattern from each of the founding strains. Also the body can have
the same “calico cat” mix of patterns. Perhaps a better name for this
guppy is “Calico Guppy.” he irst picture shows a sword version of
the Medusa, but the delta tail is more common. Also the caudal in
can have diferent patterns, suggesting there are some genetic varia-
tions of this strain.
GENETICS
he Medusa is the result of the crossing of a Y-linked Schimmelp-
fennig Platinum Sword (Schim) and an X-linked lace snakeskin.
(However the cross going the other way would presumably work as
well.) It is possible to have a calico body and lace ins and vice versa.
Presumably the lace gene for the body can cross over to the Y-chro-
mosome, leaving the lace gene for the tail on the X-chromosome.
hen the lace gene on the X-chromosome can be lost in a further
outcrossing. his would account for some variation seen in Medusas.
It is actually very diicult to identify Medusas on the basis of their
appearance as there can be guppies of a very diferent genotype that
have a similar appearance. Yellow platinum in the front of the body
is usually a strong indication. However a dark blue “bandit marking”
where the yellow platinum color of the Schimmelfennig Platinum is
normally expressed would be a necessary prerequisite for the Galaxy
phenotype for many people.
Medusa Roundtail
Platinum Medusa
Platinum
his is another case where the actual genetics of the guppy would
have to be known before this guppy can be deinitely classed as a
Medusa.
Presumably the guppy combines Medusa genetics with Full Platinum
genetics.
Blue Galaxy
his is the red version of the Galaxy. his particular strain has a
fantail.
White Galaxy
Hiwatari Galaxy Yellow Grass. Picture sent to Philip Shaddock by Eddie Lee
Eddie Lee, a guppy broker in Taiwan, calls this strain the Hiwatari
Galaxy Yellow Grass. here is a bandit blue patch in the front of the
body, which usually is a marker for a Galaxy.
GENETICS
he Grass and Galaxy guppies make excellent and interesting crosses
and are much loved in Asia.
Luke Roebuck reports that he uses the Grass and Galaxies as cross
compatible strains, both ways.
he putative genotype for this guppy is:
XGra YSc La Sst Ssb
Where Gra = grass; Sc = Schimmelpfennig Platinum; Sst = snakeskin tail; Ssb = snakeskin body; La
= lace
Santa Maria
6 Grass
he Japanese Grass guppy has dot pattern ins and a “Nike” swoosh
on the body (Figure 1). It comes in a variety of colors.
he name comes from the fact the ins look like a ield of grass to the
Japanese breeders. Creating a ine, even dot pattern is the goal. his
must mean that the grass pattern has snakeskin alleles or additional
modiier genes that modify the grass pattern from the chainlink
pattern of typical snakeskin strains. he reason I suspect the Grass
guppy derives from snakeskins is because the dot pattern on the ins
is not that biologically diferent from the snakeskin pattern, which
consists of islands of black color cells in a sea of platinum. And the
snakeskin body and in genes are actually separate genes.
See the snakeskin pattern for a discussion of the snakeskin pattern
as “islands of melanophores in a sea of platinum.” he Guppy Color
Manual contains extensive discussions o the biological basis of this
pattern.
106 | Grass and Glass
he Grass guppy is a great guppy to use for creating strains with dot
pattern ins. he Japan Blue guppy is often found with Grass ins. he
Moscow also makes a excellent outcross.
he Blue Grass in Figure 1 was crossed with a Midnight Black Mos-
cow to produce a Red Grass Moscow in the F1 (Figure 3).
Notice that the Nike swoosh has been suppressed by the Moscow
genes.
Guppy Color STrainS | 107
Blue Grass
Shown here is the classic Blue Grass, the most popular color of the
Grass guppy. It incorporates the Asian Blau mutation, which converts
red color to metallic blue when heterozygous. A drop of Grass gup-
pies includes Red Grass, the base strain. Red Grass does not have
the Asian Blau gene. A dull greyish blue guppy is also produced, the
homozygous Asian Blau Grass guppy. See the Red Grass entry for
a sibling of the male pictured above. here is also a yellow version of
the strain and other less common color varieties.
When the background color of the ins is transparent, the guppy is
described as being “glass” as in Blue Glass Grass.
GENETICS
he Grass gene is sex-linked (Gra). It is commonly X-linked.
Although the Red Grass can be maintained separately from the Blue
Grass, usually you maintain both types in the same strain, because
the Red Grass always appears in a drop of Blue Grass. Simply
choose a Blue Grass male and a female with a grass pattern in her
ins and you will get both Blue and Red versions of Grass, as well as
the homozygous dull colored and virtually patternless version. he
homozygous Asian Blau mutants tend to be smaller and somewhat
more fragile than their siblings. Knowing the genetics of the Blue
108 | Grass and Glass
Red Grass
Red Grass. his is a sibling to the male shown at the top of the Blue Grass entry.
his Red Grass appears to incorporate the Full Red Albino genes.
Yellow Grass
his color morph has a great deal of yellow color cells. his guppy
appears to have a bandit marking in the front of the body.
Purple Grass
his guppy appears to a mixture of red pigment color and blue irido-
phores. here appears to be a bandit marking in the front of the body.
Silver Grass
XPl Y or XYPl
since the gene can cross over. he mg gene is implied.
I should add that the body and ins can have separate genetics, so to
be correct you should add the Platinum in gene (Plt) to the geno-
type:
XPl Plt Y Mg/-
Full Golds appear to have essentially the same genetics. hey may
involve the addition of other genes.
here is one more ingredient necessary to produce the yellow/gold
and white platinum color. he half-black gene (Ni) is required. So the
full genetic description of a Platinum guppy is:
XNi Pl Y Mg/- or XNi Pl Y because the mg gene is implied.
he mg gene can have many expressions, depending on its interac-
tions with other color genes, but its most obvious and common
expression is that it gives the guppy a white color overlaid by yellow.
he Half-Black Yellow may be regarded as the basis for Full Plati-
num and Full Gold strains. A Half-Black Yellow is a guppy that does
not have the Mg gene for the body, but it does have the gene for the
in colors. his suggests that the body and ins can be under diferent
genetic control.
here is a long standing rule that you cannot create a half-black
green guppy by crossing a half-black yellow with a half-black blue.
You get a greyish dirty bluish green guppy. his is because the yellow
color cells proliferate in the presence of the white color cells. In the
layered system of color cells, the repulsion of black color cells from
yellow colors that thins out yellow color cells is blocked by the white
color cells. he white color cells act as insulation between the black
and yellow color cells. Again the Guppy Color Manual is the reference
here.
Since yellow color cells have motile pigment, the yellow color can
fade out under stress. Often you see “White Full Platinum” guppies
ofered for sale on the Internet. he picture of the guppy makes them
look all white. But the buyer receives them and discovers they have
yellow color that varies according to the guppy’s mood and the light-
ing.
When the yellow color cells are removed genetically, something curi-
ous happens. he guppy becomes a silver color. (See Silverados in the
Magenta chapter.) Color cells inluence each other. Apparently the
Guppy Color STrainS | 115
Female Full Platinum. Notice the metallic gold color on her body, a sure sign that she has Platinum
genetics.
Albino Full Platinum Picture courtesy of ATFG. his guppy is not showing yellow in the picture.
Grey version of the Full Gold Leucophore. Notice the female in the back.
his guppy has a yellow platinum body and red ins. It has some red
in the peduncle area as well.
It goes by various names in the hobby, such as the Sunset guppy.
However it is simply a Full Platinum that has been crossed with a
guppy with red ins. As noted in the introductory notes, there is a
120 | Full Golds and Full platinums
Platinum gene for the body and a separate gene for the ins. his ap-
pears to be the case where the red in genes are somewhat epistatic to
the in Platinum gene. he red in the peduncle area suggests that the
original cross may be to a full red.
his strain has a shiny, white and gold metallic appearance with a
blue cast. It’s pink eyes are due to the albino gene.
GENETICS
his may be a Full Platinum with the blau gene. See Luke Roebuck’s
description below. he blau gene would convert red color cells to blue
metal color, giving it is overall bluish color.
BREEDERS COMMENTS
Luke Roebuck
It is known as Platinum but with a new twist- Blue (blau) Platinum.
It is the result of a cross between the golden Platinum and the Japan
blau “cheat”. he colors are chameleon like platinum gold in the body
and blue-gold in the tail. When settled down it looks sky blue in
the ins! hese are the young F1 siblings from the WGC auction in
Czech Republic.
Guppy Color STrainS | 121
8 Schimmelpfennig platinums
I have put the Schimmelpfennig Platinum mutation into its own cat-
egory to help distinguish it from the Full Platinums and Full Golds
due to the Platinum gene and its autosomal co-factor the Metallic
gold (Mg) gene.
While I believe both forms share a common autosomal gene, the Mg
gene, the Schimmelpfenning Platinum sex-linked gene (Sc) expresses
the yellow platinum color primarily in the front of the body and in
the caudal in, whereas the Full Platinum body gene (Pl) gene is
expressed primarily in the peduncle area. I actually combined the two
genes to create a strain I called “Double Yellow” with an overall body
platinum yellow color. (See below).
he Guppy Color Manual is the reference for the theory about the
relationship between sex-linked and autosomal color genes.
As you will see in this chapter, the Schimmelpfennig Platinum gene
is used in a number of crosses to create unique guppy designs, not
124 | Schimmelpfennig platinums
least of all the famous Galaxy and Medusa guppies out of Japan. If
you are interested in playing with guppy genetics, this would be an
excellent strain to have in your ish room.
Guppy Color STrainS | 125
he blond version shown above shows more clearly than the grey ver-
sion that the yellow platinum color is somehow genetically prohib-
ited from coloring the peduncle.
128 | Schimmelpfennig platinums
I have combined this strain with the Full Platinum (which colors the
half-body area) to produce the Double Yellow guppy.
Double Yellow
At irst glance this looks like a Full Platinum. In fact it combines two
“platinum” strains, the Y-linked Schimmelpfennig Platinum Sword
and the Full Platinum. he Schimmelpfennig Platinum gene (Sc)
colors the front of the body and the Full Platinum (Pl) gene colors
the peduncle. hat is why I call it a “double yellow.”
he genotype is:
XPl YSc
Where Pl= Platinum, Sc = Schimmelpfenning Platinum
El Dorado
HISTORY
According Iwasaki in Aqua Life magazine, in 1990 Hiroshi Sugino
crossed a German Schimmelpfennig Platinum Sword and an Old
Fashion guppy (see the Color Strains entry for this strain, which
is based on the German Emerald Green sword). Some of the F1
showed a triangle delta tail. hen Gen Hideshima used the F1 to
cross to Japanese Mosaic. his is how the original El Dorado was
born. he name El Dorado is said to be given to the strain by Japa-
nese breeders, who took the name from the ancient “Lost City of
Gold” known as “El Dorado.”
DESCRIPTION
he El Dorado has the yellow platinum color of the Schimmelpfen-
nig Platinum gene in the front of the body. It also has greenish me-
tallic color which may be due to the German Emerald Green sword
(EGI gene).
Apparently the original El Dorado strain had a platinum yellow body
without the green and blue. his suggests that the greenish color
may be due to the Stoerzbach gene instead of the EGI gene. It had a
yellow-orange to red tail including a black dot in the caudal in. hey
130 | Schimmelpfennig platinums
Albino El Dorado
Albino version of the El Dorado. Luke Roebuck. he albino version seems to have lost its greenish
metallic color. Is it a version without the Stoerzbach gene?
GENETICS
gene is usually Y-linked. he fact that the guppy has red ins suggests
that the original outcross strain had red ins.
he account of the El Dorado’s origins by Iwasaki is interesting. In
crossing the original Old Fashioned guppy to the Schimmelpfen-
nig Platinum Sword, the breeder is in efect re-inforcing the Vienna
Emerald Green genes in the Old Fashioned guppy. hat’s because the
Vienna Emerald Green sword is the base strain for the Schimmelp-
fennig Platinum Sword.
Yoshiki Tsutsui’s family genealogy of metal guppies shows the El
Dorado descended from a Schimmelpfennig Platinum Sword that
landed in Japan in 1990. It belongs to a group that includes the Santa
Maria and Galaxy.
A comparison between the El Dorado and the Schimmelpfennig
Sword shows their similarity.
As you can see in the above photo, there is a lot of green metallic
sheen in this guppy. his is due in part to the EGI (Emerald Green
Iridescent) gene that is part of the Vienna Emerald Green strain
makeup. Still, there is deinitely an overall greenish metallic cast on
132 | Schimmelpfennig platinums
his strain appears to have platinum gold color in the front of the
body and coral red in the half-body area, plus a red tail.
GENETICS
Most likely the platinum yellow color comes from the Schimmelp-
fennig Platinum gene.
BREEDERS COMMENTS
Flemming Stræde
From the start we had some troubles, with males being infertile due
to extended gonopodiums. hat problem we succeeded breeding out
of the strain. To be honest females are an ugly looking guppy, but it
seems to have no efect on the males.
he strain is pure breeding, but it doesn’t produce a lot of fry, twenty
fry per batch is normal. Heavy feeding with live food, or any kind of
high protein food will bring up numbers.
he strain has in the past year done very well in European shows, and
several times it has reached points in the eighties. As far as I know,
only three European breeders keep the strain, so its not that com-
mon.
I have only taken a few good pictures of this strain, and to be honest
not two with the ish showing the same color. It sort of changes with
the background, plants or what kind of mood it’s in. It’s not a prob-
lem though. Seems like all ish in a tank pick up on the same colors,
like a common chameleon characteristic.”
9 pink Whites
Pink Whites are characterized as having white ins and a white area
at the top of the peduncle near the juncture with the caudal in.
Pink Whites are not the same mutation as the Pink mutation, despite
the fact both genes can be expressed with white color. he Pink mu-
tation afects the full body whereas the Pink White appears to afect
only the caudal in and the top rear of the peduncle. he Pink White
involves a sex-linked gene (Pw) and an unknown autosomal gene,
while the Pink mutation involves an autosomal gene whose efect on
the phenotype is known in Pingus and Pandas.
Snow White
he Snow White has a deep white color with some greenish high-
lights. It has a deep white patch at the base of the peduncle and
white ins.
GENETICS
Tomoko Young has said Snow Whites are a development of Pink
Whites. It is possible the strain is a combination of Pink Whites and
a strain with the Metallic gold (Mg) gene. However, the presence of
greenish highlights suggest it may also have the Stoerzbach mutation.
he putative genetics for this strain may be:
XPl Pw Y ss
Where Full Platinum; Pw = Pink White; s = Stoerzbach
his guppy shows its Pink White heritage in the white base of its
peduncle and in a small white area at the base of the caudal in.
However the dominant phenotype is a green platinum body. If you
look closely at the base of the female’s peduncle, you will see a “pink
white” area. he red caudal in indicates a red tail gene is part of this
strain’s genetic makeup.
140 | pink Whites
GENETICS
I crossed females of this strain with Hawaiian Blue Moscows males
and got Blue Moscows with light blue ins and the pink white patch
in the peduncle. (See the Pink White Moscow entry.) his was in the
F1 generation. he females showed white at the base of their pe-
duncle as well. Since the females were composed of one X-linked
allele from the Moscow father and one X-linked allele from the Pink
White mother, the conclusion must be that the Pink White allele is
dominant. he fact that the males or females did not have red in their
ins, indicates that this strain had a Y-linked red tail allele (Rdt).
his guppy shows the combination of the Pink White gene (seen at
the top of the peduncle) with the albino and swallow genes. here
appears to be yellow spots in the body as well.
| 141
Both Pingus and Pinks share the same gene, the autosomal pink (pk)
gene. he diference is that the Pingus have the half-black gene (Ni)
as well as the Pink gene. Females typically have a heavy reticulation
pattern.
his mutation is not related to the Pink White mutation.
he gene is said to be epistatic to red color cells.
Pingu
Picture and guppy by Luke Roebuck. According to Luke, David Liebman said his strain was closest
to the original Pingus. You can see the resemblance between this strain and the picture in the ad
below.
has what appears to be white color cells in place of black color cells
in the half-body area. However the name is somewhat of a misnomer
as the Pink gene is epistatic to red color cells when it is homozygous.
he pink color must come from blood in the skin.
he original mutation that gives this strain its name was developed
by the David Liebman over ten years. We can see what the original
Pingu looked like in the ad he placed in “Tropical Fish Hobbyist,”
December, 1979. Notice the similarity to Luke’s Pingu at the top of
this entry.
A clue to the origins of the Pingu is where it developed on the
guppy’s body. In his article, David Liebman shows in a picture of
the original mutation. Notice the pink spot in the upper part of the
peduncle.
Pingu Panda
he strain has the Moscow Blue background, white areas due to the
homozygous pink genes and a pink half-body area due to the half-
black gene interacting with the pink mutation. It’s genotype is:
XNiYMw pkpk
Where Ni = half-black, Mw = Moscow, pk = pink
Platinum Pingu
Platinum Pingu female. As she got older she developed a completely metallic peduncle like her brother
above.
Guppy Color STrainS | 145
his is a small strain. It has a short round caudal in. Besides the typi-
cal Panda markings, the most obvious characteristic is the transparent
belly. You can see the eggs and the eyes of the developing fry in the
Guppy Color STrainS | 147
female’s gravid spot area in the above photo. Also notice the lack of
iridophores (relecting cells). he eye is all black with no silver irido-
phores. here appears to be some iridophores in the front of the body,
but the body generally lacks iridophores, a characteristic of the glass
belly mutation.
Notice also the blood showing in the gills. Normally this is an area
covered by shiny iridophores, protecting it from the sun. he peachy
color of the female is typical of this strain. he fry are born with this
color.
GENETICS
he strain is a combination of Panda and the Glass Belly alleles. he
Glass Belly allele is autosomal recessive. So the gene notation for this
strain is:
XYMw gbgb pkpk Where Mw = Moscow, gb = Glass Belly, pk = Pink
he glass belly gene seems to afect only silver iridophores, the type
found in the belly and in the head and eyes. hat is why you see some
shiny metallic blue color in the body and the ins.
he other notable feature of this strain is that the dull black color
on the male does not appear to fade, unlike the black usually found
on Moscows. his suggests that the glass belly mutation may afect
melanophores as well. But this is not certain.
A blond version of the strain was part of the original strain I ac-
148 | pinks and pingus
Junichi Ito supplied us with this photo of a Luster guppy. It is likely to be the same as the Blue
Diamond guppy.
his may be the same basic strain as the Blue Diamond. It appears to
be a half-black guppy with a metal gene. he tail has the “full moon”
shape.
Lazuli
his guppy was designed by Satoshi Kobayashi from the Osaka Kansai Guppy Club. Picture used
with permission.
Guppy Color STrainS | 151
BREEDERS COMMENTS
Robert Gall
“he following comments relect my experiences with lazuli and coral
red, both of which I have bred.
he body color lazuli is only found to be Y-linked. his color appears
as a bright blue on the fore body. his bright blue difers clearly from
Japan Blue.
here are some striking similarities between lazuli and coral red. he
intensity and the development of the lazuli is similar to coral red. In
the ish room of Gernot Kaden, Pirna, Germany, several red males
appeared among lazuli ofspring of various lazuli delta and double
sword types. hese red “lazuli” were very similar to the diferent
shades of red of coral red. Coral red combined with the Asian Blau
efect appears bright blue, very similar to lazuli. So there are similari-
ties.
Lazuli males seem to have, like coral red males, no trait for a dorsal
coloration on the Y-chromosome. hey do have double sword traits
but these traits are not that good and equal to the traits of coral red
(which difer from the DS traits of platinum strains or Vienna Emer-
ald strains). Especially the spreading of the swords is rather bad.
When lazuli is combined with other body colors or patterns, it be-
haves in some cases similar to coral red. A combination of lazuli and
X-linked snake skin leads to a combined pattern of lazuli and snake
skin. It is very similar to a pattern of coral red and snake skin. he
lazuli is reduced to a blue bar close behind the operculum. he rest
of the body is covered by the snake skin pattern. A similar combined
pattern can be observed on a guppy with the coral red and snake skin
genes.
In contrast to coral red, lazuli is just a single trait: a bright blue
coloration of the fore body. he coral red body color is a combination
of at least two traits: a metallic red fore body and a poor light blue
on the lower part of the peduncle. his light blue can also appear on
males of other strains and is probably a recessive Y-linked trait of the
Vienna Emerald trait-complex. Under special circumstances Vienna
Emerald also show this trait on the peduncle. here is a doublesword
strain which permanently shows this trait. It was a mutation in my
Vienna Emerald strain and is now bred by Gernot Kaden. he dorsal
coloration is lost, too. It shows that there is a relationship between
the traits for the dorsal color and body color of certain strains.
An interesting observation is that Gernot Kaden’s red “lazuli” also
Guppy Color STrainS | 153
showed this poor light blue on the peduncle, which makes them ap-
pear even more like coral reds. he normal lazulis don’t seem to show
it.
Lazuli seems to be a similar gene/trait as the gene/trait for the metal-
lic red color of the body color coral red. Whether the lazuli trait is
just a variation of the gene for metallic red color of the coral red or is
a similar but independent gene, can not be said yet.”
See the Turquoise strain, which appears to be a closely related muta-
tion.
DESCRIPTION
Björn Lundmark told me that this was a cross between a Lazuli and
a Galaxy. It is interesting because the Lazuli looks like it has a lace
snakeskin body. Since the Galaxy genotype includes the lace gene,
this is obviously what is expressed here.
Turquoise
he turquoise gene produces a metallic turquoise (blue green) color
on the body and base of the caudal in.
he mutation was discovered in a drop of Red Mosaic guppies in the
spring of 2003 by the Japanese breeder Masanori Suzuki, associated
with the “Delta Space” guppy speciality store, owned by Mr. Ino-
154 | Blue Metal Guppies
mata. It has since been extracted from the strain and applied to other
strains, such as this “Green Tail,” a solid color guppy with a turquoise
body.
Junichi Ito has said that it is similar to the Lazuli, although the La-
zuli is blue purple in color rather than blue green.
Green Tail. Picture courtesy Junichi Ito. You can see the IFGA Green inluence in this guppy’s body
Guppy Color STrainS | 155
and in proportions.
GENETICS
Junichi says the gene is Y-linked, although it is expected to become
X-linked as well, just like the Lazuli.
he Japan Blue gene has the gene symbol “A” for Aquamarine.
his guppy is fun to cross because of its interesting genetics. A cross-
over has created an X-linked version, but the most common location
of the Japan Blue gene is the Y-chromosome. It is fairly tightly linked
to the sex-determining region on the Y-chromosome.
GENETICS
Japan Blue and snakeskin cross. Notice the blue background to the snakeskin
Guppy Color STrainS | 157
pattern.
he albino version of the Japan Blue loses much of the intensity and
saturation of its blue color. he reason is that black color cells (me-
lanophores) at the base layer of the skin act to absorb light passing
through the skin. When it is absent, as in the case of the albino Japan
Blue, the light is relected back through the skin, washing out the
blue to some extent.
he guppy at the top of this entry is a classic Japanese version of
the “Aquamarine” guppy. It is probably the result of a cross between
a wild Japan blue and a Grass guppy. he dotted pattern in the in
would suggest this. Since the Japan Blue metallic color only afects
the peduncle, the genetics of any particular form of Japan Blue will
depend on the presence of the gene for the ins. For example, a Japan
Blue with red ins is popular. In the wild form the ins were colorless
and short, or with some color. So the genotype for the guppy at the
top of this listing is:
XGra YA
Where Gra = grass ins, A = Aquamarine or Japan Blue
At irst glance this guppy appears to have the Japan Blue gene. How-
ever, the fact that the blue / green iridescent color spreads over the
entire body makes this somewhat doubtful. his is more indicative of
the action of the Emerald Green Iridescent (EGI) gene. Or perhaps
it is a combination of both Japan Blue and EGI genes, co-dominant-
ly expressed.
| 159
12 Stoerzbach
his is the classic Stoerzbach Metal Sword, with a metallic blue body
and yellow ins. he reddish color in the upper and lower swords is
also typical. he female is colorless, although there appears to be a
little yellow color at the base of the tail in.
GENETICS
he guppy shown above mutatated out of a Vienna Emerald Green
strain.
160 | Stoerzbach
Gene symbol:
ss
Where s= Stoerzbach Metal
When the ish are developing, lower and upper swords develop dif-
ferently. Maybe this is due to the elongatus genes, don’t know for
sure. In place of the upper sword, irst the yellow/olive drab spot
(elongatus) is visible and the lower sword starts to develop. Later
there is a small top sword visible. For this diferentiation in growth,
I can think of two reasons. First is that the elongatus gene adds red
color to the top sword and just needs more time to develop red color,
or second that part of the color is due to other (X-bound) yellow
color genes. Most of the color of the caudal and all of the color of the
dorsal in is due to Y-linked genes, but my females started to develop
yellow at the top of their caudal in.
My latest generations (stopped breeding them a few month ago
because I had to move) had well developed lower swords, but the
upper swords were getting too small. I strictly selected on the right
males (fully colored ins and good shape), so I think the problem was
X-linked (maybe yellow color crossed over to the females, so I had to
select these females that showed some yellow?)
he females can be used to outcross with diferent strains. hey
inherit good in shape but no color on the dorsal in. It is a strain
that matures slowly but can live up to 2,5-3 years, patience is needed.
Because of the diferentiation in sword growth and the slow speed
of maturation, many of my young ish ended up in a culled ish tank.
But after many months some of them looked really good and were
put back in the breeding program.
here was something about the shape of the dorsal in. he shape was
very good, starting steep and ending in a point, but the total length
was limited. he females had played a part in this, when used in other
strains they did improve in shape (made shapes better in general,
but could not solve triangle like dorsals). After using other females
( Japan Blue doublesword females) with the Stoerzbach males, the
length of the dorsal in improved. his was clearly an X-linked issue,
but it can be said that the Stoerzbach ish developed slower then the
non-Stoerzbach.ish.
With the new females the length of the in was better, but they
needed a lot of time to develop to mature in length in comparison
with the Viennese Emerald siblings. At irst the swords tended to
grow crooked or bent, but by selection this issue was resolved. Also
by selection the Stoerzbach covered more body area, only a small
strip of the back was not colored. he ish also developed colored
scales on the head, something that is now included in my Japan Blue
strain (now looks blue instead of yellow). Between the swords, the
162 | Stoerzbach
Stoerzbach illed up some extra tissue, with good selection this was
also solved. Although the males looked very good, the females weren’t
the most good looking. I used them to start new strains with males
that I bought at shows... and with success. I don’t often see these nice
dorsal ins at shows. I remember I had a lot of inbreeding depression,
there were not many people who bred these ish so I couldn’t add
new genes. I kept several lines for several years. I only kept the lines
that didn’t show too many problems and this is how I could keep the
strain.
In one of my previous posts, I attached a picture of one of the show
quality males I have bred.
he diference here is the lack of the overall blue metallic color due
to the Stoerzbach gene.
What is interesting about this phenotype is that a similar phenotype
appeared in a cross between a coarse snakeskin and a Yellow Full
Platinum. his means that the Stoerzbach gene may not be necessary
to the phenotype, but rather a yellow platinum gene inherent in all
snakeskins may be the signiicant factor.
| 165
13 Micarifs
well developed, like most farmed guppies. his has somewhat sullied
its reputation among fancy guppy breeders, but its popular metallic
yellow look has given it a home in some top breeders’ tanks.
Another version of the strain seen in pet stores and often kept by
even advanced hobbyists has a white, shiny metallic body and red ins
or yellow ins. A version with red ins may be known as a “German
Sunset” or simply Sunset.
GENETICS
German breeders believe the Micarif is a combination of a homozy-
gous autosomal recessive gene Stoerzbach metal (ss) in combination
with a homozygous snakeskin gene:
Males - XSsb Sst YSsb Sst ss
Females - XSsb Sst XSsb Sst ss
According to these sources, in crossing with other strains the irst
generation usually yields snakeskins, meaning the F1 is heterozygous
for the snakeskin gene. Only those individuals in the F2 generation
that are homozygous for the snakeskin and Stoerzbach metal genes
show the characteristic metallic phenotype.
My own reproduction of this cross did not produce the classic Micar-
if shiny metallic body. he picture below shows an F2 of a cross I did
between a Stoerzbach Metal Swordtail (male) and Kaden X-linked
lace snakeskin, both German strains.
F2 Stoerzbach Metal Sword male X Kaden X-linked snakesking female. About six weeks old.
Guppy Color STrainS | 167
As you can see by comparing this guppy with the Micarif at the top
of this entry, the Stoerzbach cross produces a thick, uneven, spotty
metal guppy, not the smooth, silky metal inish of the Micarif.
In one individual of this type, I saw telltale signs of the snakeskin
pattern expressed in the ins.
Interesting to note is that this phenotype appeared in a diferent
cross, between a coarse snakeskin and a Yellow Full Platinum. he
diference is that the guppy shown here developed a deinite bluish
cast as it got older, suggesting the presence of the Stoerzbach gene.
he French breeder and author Ronan Boutot has told me that he
thinks the Micarif requires the presence of the half-black gene.
Apparently many Japanese breeders do not consider the Micarif
guppy to have a gene unique to the strain, but rather a gene found in
a number of strains. he Micarif gene is the “solid” (ss) gene found
on many Japanese strains. It is autosomal. he Japanese “solid” gene
is not what the name implies, a monochromatic guppy. Rather the
English word “solid” transcribes to “shining” for Japanese breeders.
he author of the Aqua-Farm Japan book calls the Micarif gene
the “material” gene (mm). However Bruce (Hsueh Tseng-Biao)
from Taiwan tells us that the original word was probably “metallic.”
In transliteration from English to Japanese, and then to Chinese,
metallic became material. he author of the Aqua-Farm book asserts
that the Japanese Full Gold strain has the same metallic gene as the
Micarif. he question remains: does the Micarif have the Metallic
Gold (Mg) gene?
I have combined the Mg and snakeskin genes and not produced a
Micarif. So it is not the Mg gene.
I currently believe that the Micarif has its own gene, which I will
call “solid” since it may very well be the gene identiied by Japanese
sources. Since the gene symbol “s” is already used by the Stoerzbach
gene, I will give it the designation “so.” So the genotype of the Mi-
carif is:
X YSsb Sst soso
Where Ssb = snakeskin body, Sst = Snakeskin tail, so = solid metal gene
Orange Micarif
14 red Guppies
his chapter includes full red guppies and guppies with red ins.
I have studied Full Reds fairly closely and reported my indings ex-
tensively in the Guppy Color Manual. I will briely summarize these
indings here.
he most interesting question you can ask about a Full Red is “what
makes them all red?” Various people have tried to answer this ques-
tion. Some suggest there are up to six diferent genes involved, some
suggest just one. I believe it is the case that both views are correct for
reasons I outline below.
170 | red Guppies
Often when you outcross a Full Red female to another non-Full Red,
you get males that are only partially full red. At other times you get
Full Red males in the very irst generation. Why?
he theory that Full Reds are due to multiple genes is based on
cursory observation. Red when it appears as spots on the body are
Y-linked. here is heavy selection for red spots on wild guppy males.
According to a theory originally proposed by the American breeder
Dr. Larr there are at least six diferent red genes, accounting for the
variation you see in the color on diferent red guppies. According to
this theory, there is not a single gene making the entire body a single
red color. he more red genes involved, the redder the guppy. he
fewer red genes the pinker the strain.
However against this theory is the evidence that you can create a Full
Red male in one generation of an outcross between a Full Red female
and a non-Full Red male. My own crosses indicate that it is indeed
possible to create a full red male using only full red females...with the
caveat: providing you are using a neutral male...neutral in terms of
the full red genes that is. he question becomes what genes prevent
the expression of the full red genes.
My current theory is that the full red gene is autosomal but in order
for it to be expressed it requires sex-linked genes. his is in fact true
of all color genes. he sex-linked genes determine where the color
gene is expressed and to what extent it is expressed. An example is
the gene that blackens the half-black pattern. When that autosomal
black gene is expressed in the Moscow instead of the half-black gup-
py, it is expressed throughout the body, creating a full black Moscow.
In the case of an outcross to a strain X-linked for the Platinum gene,
you get a Full Platinum. he same variation in outcomes is also the
case for the full red gene. Whether or not you get a Full Red guppy
depends on the outcross male.
An interesting question is what happens when you go in the other
direction, a Full Red male to a non-Full Red female. here is a dif-
ference in terms of the expression between some genes when they
are is X-linked versus Y-linked. heoretically it should not matter
where the gene is, X or Y. But I think a gene under the inluence of
a Wingean supergene can have diferent expression in the male and
female. (If it is in the Wingean supergene it probably has mutated to
a dysfunctional form in the female...)
Winge studies and my studies of Moscow genetics suggest that it
is important to take the male into account. Moscow “normal” black
for example is expressed diferently in Moscow males and females.
Guppy Color STrainS | 171
Red Pigments
here are actually two color pigments involved in guppy red, a carot-
enoid red and a pteridine red (see the Guppy Color Manual). Since ca-
rotenoid red has to be acquired from food, and it has health beneits,
female guppies are attracted to red spots on male guppies. Rich red
guppies signiicant healthy mates. Where carotenoid food sources are
scarce, male guppies can simulate red carotenoid with pteridine red.
Yellow color cells and red color cells are biochemically closely related.
Red and yellow pigment are known to be in the same color cell in
some animal species. he guppy Magenta mutation (discussed in the
Magenta chapter) causes yellow color cells to develop as red color
cells to varying degrees. Since Full Red strains can vary between very
orangey strains to purplish strains, the Magenta mutation ofers evi-
dence that the continuum of color is based on the activity of a single
protein, or a gene involved in the manufacture of a protein.
Feeding a carotenoid rich diet, such as brine shrimp, to Full Reds can
alter the depth and tone of the red color.
172 | red Guppies
Guppy Color STrainS | 173
Full Red
European Full Red guppy. A ine example photographed at a Danish guppy show by Finn Binde-
balle.
he Full Red guppy may not have a single origin, and mutations for
the red head could have occurred independently in Asia, the U.S. and
Russia. However, one theory is that the original red head mutation
may have occurred in Russia and then made its way around the world
undetected. Apparently the irst full reds to appear in Europe arrived
in pet stores from Moscow.
here is some evidence that the red head Full Red descended from
Moscows. I have created Full Red Moscows in the F1 by crossing a
Midnight Black Moscow with the blond gene with a blond female
Full Red. My Chiasson Full Red line was entirely X-lined red.
A Full Red guppy is red throughout its body, including the belly. he
Coral Red Double Sword guppies with red heads are also full red,
but they are treated as a separate topic and classiied as metallic red
guppies. Crossing a Coral Red Double sword with a red delta female
174 | red Guppies
Hans-Peter Neuse gives the following advice about breeding his European
Full Red line: “he color is dominant on the Y-chromosome, but the color is
very, very diicult, when you make crosses. You will loose much of the inten-
sive red. he females are mid-sized, the best have a red backside, with a lit
bit of blue in the caudal in. I never make crosses between grey reds (because
of black spots on the caudal in) and my reds. he best way to improve your
strain is to make crosses with normal blond red females. You will get some
very big ones! hen you have to select for improving color. I know, it’s a long
way to go to get satisfying good results, but it’s worth it!”
On the former GKR forum he says: “For all the years I´ve been breeding
Guppy Color STrainS | 175
Full Reds not one yellow version appeared in my lines. Maybe one reason
could be, I carefully avoid using females with yellow in the innage for
breeding! I prefer females with blueish ins, like the female shown above.”
BREEDERS COMMENTS
Edgar Chiasson, American Full Reds
My observations have been that the color is not dominant but rather
is co-dominant with other colors.” Ed has also said that his inbred
reds occasionally throw yellow guppies.
his is the albino version of the Full Red, a very popular version be-
cause it suppresses black color. his is an orange red morph.
he ATFG Albino Full Red is a purple red, showing that reds can
can vary between an orange red and a purple red. I have long thought
178 | red Guppies
this may relect the diferent forms of red pigment, carotenoid red in
the case of the more orange red and pteridine red in the case of the
more purple red.
Marlboro Guppy
his strain has a coral red body combined with the Emerald Green
Iridescent (EGI) pattern. It is said to have originated from the Vi-
enna Emerald Green doublesword strain.
he emerald green iridescence spreads into the front of the body. No-
tice the black stripe across the top of the front of the body and in the
top part of the peduncle. hese are also characteristic of the Vienna
Emerald Green strain. hey have a blue or greenish blue metallic
color on the lower part of the peduncle, sometimes stretching into
the belly area, probably due to the EGI gene complex.
he black spot in the front of the body is characteristic of the Vienna
Emerald green strain.
GENETICS
his guppy’s genotype would be:
XDs YDs Co SmIr
Where Ds = doublesword genes on both the X and Y chromosomes, Co = coral red, SmIr = Emerald
Green Iridescent.
Robert Gall, a breeder of Lazulis and Coral Red, thinks that the two
strains might have related genetics. See his Breeders Comment in the
Lazuli strain entry. Robert has also told me that there is an X-linked
coral red. he strain includes the platinum gene.
his appears to be a Full Platinum guppy with red ins. he red and
black color in the peduncle is possibly the partial expression of the
half-black gene that is part of the Full Platinum makeup. he red ins
have the full moon tail shape.
184 | red Guppies
| 185
15 Half-Black or Tuxedo
Japan Blue
Area of Coverage
Nobody has successfully created a full black guppy by selectively
breeding the half-black pattern to cover more and more of the body.
A spontaneous full black mutant from half-black parents has not oc-
cured...although the Moscow may indeed be precisely that ish. As I
note in discussing the Moscow in the Guppy Color Manual, I believe
the Moscow has a defective form a gene that suppresses color in the
front of the guppy body, making the half-body gene, like the half-
black, the norm rather than the exception.
In fact the half-black pattern is not conined to the body. Most
people think that the half-black guppy is one with a black peduncle
and the ins can be a diferent color. But if you look at the irst de-
scriptions of the half-black guppy, the black extends into the caudal
in. Here is a picture the Russian scientist Kirpichnikov drew of
the half-black pattern (nigrocaudatus is the scientiic name) three
decades ago.
188 | Half-Black or Tuxedo
F1 male who is the result of a wild guppy male cross to a half-black yellow female.
Guppy Color STrainS | 189
Half-Black Dominance
Dragon Head Guppy. Notice that the snakeskin pattern has become a dot pattern in the ins. You can
barely notice the snakeskin pattern in the front of the body.
peting against. In the case of the snakeskin the half-black genes ap-
pear to be “dominant” in the half-body area and “co-dominant” in the
rest of the body, including the ins. his produces the “dragon head”
phenotype. I tend to be circumspect in my use of the terms.
Breeding Half-Blacks
As mentioned earlier, the half-black gene is usually found on the
X-chromosome, although some rare strains may have the gene on the
Y-chromosome.
he female should be picked for form and intensity of half-black
pattern. Select the females with the thickest peduncles and the best
overall shape. he usual advice is to select the females showing the
darkest half-black pattern, regardless of in color.
Guppy Color STrainS | 191
Half-Black Yellow
HB Yellow. Picture by Philip Shaddock. his individual has a bit of yellow streaking in the top part
of the caudal in. his is considered to be a fault in a show guppy.
his accounts for the pure yellow tail, which normally would have
black in it from the half-black genes. In a cross I conducted with a
feral guppy, the natural expression of the half-black gene in the tail
emerged in the F1 of the cross.
he yellow caudal is actually part of a two layer color cell system with
white leucophores below yellow xanthophores (yellow color cells).
BREEDERS COMMENT
he strain is diicult to breed to show quality standards because the
color yellow is easily overshadowed and is darkened by intermixed
black pigment. Yellow guppies have an abundance of xanthophores,
(yellow pigment cells). After repeated inbreeding, the light yellow
may be diicult to maintain. Half-black pastels are commonly used
by show breeders to clean up the in color of the half-black yellows
by various crossing techniques.
Make sure you choose females for breeding that have pure yellow
ins.
Another problem that crops up with the Half-Black Yellow strain is
that the black tends to bleed into the caudal in if inbred too long.
(his conirms that the half-black gene also afects the caudal in.)
Size tends to dwindle quickly with successive generations so it is
recommended that the breeder keep at least three lines of these go-
ing at once: one line for color, one for shape and one for size. Many
people won’t work with this strain because of the high number of
tanks required to maintain it to show quality standard. Some believe
it requires at least 18 tanks to properly maintain it to show standards.
Some breeders recommend using Half-Black Pastels to “clean-up”
the yellow on this strain. You need to ind strains that have the half-
black gene on the Y-chromosome and not the X-chromosome. In
doing a cross to avoid the half-black pattern, use gray females from
these strains. However, this is a risky cross if you do not know the
genetic background of the two strains. he problem is that the Half-
Black Pastel color genes are dominant to the Half-Black Yellows.
Some breeders report good success crossing gold bodied Half-Black
Pastels to the strain of Half-Black Yellow that needs improvement.
Try to use the Half-Black Pastel males that have yellow in the ins
for best results. If the fry from the cross grow up and look good and
you are satisied, breed these f1 fry males back to your original line
females and start your new lines from those females or breed the F1
siblings from the cross to each other and start your two lines from
there. If you have the tank space, you can breed back to your original
Guppy Color STrainS | 193
line and breed the siblings to each other and choose the fry that give
the best results. Most people who show their half-black yellows and
win, will also have a compatible half-black pastel strain on hand to
cross into whenever they see a decline in their half-black yellows.
Half-Black Red
he challenge provided by this strain is maintaining the intensity
and density of the red and the deep black of the half-black pattern
simultaneously while selective breeding. Black spotting creeps into
the dorsal, and the red ins can become muddied, developing brown
tones. Similarly, the half-black pattern can become weak, washed-
out and lose its clear line of demarcation between the front and
back parts of the body at the dorsal leading edge. You can see in the
picture that the half-black pattern has spread into the front part of
the body.
he red color is afected by the food the guppy eats. Foods with ca-
rotenoid (which the guppy cannot synthesize de novo) help the guppy
store red pigment. For example, brine shrimp is said to deepen the
reds of Half-Black reds or other red strains. (But a redder guppy may
simply be a healthier guppy.) he other chemical in red is pteridine.
It is synthesized de novo, so it is not derived directly from food.
194 | Half-Black or Tuxedo
GENETICS
Red Genetics
See the chapter on Red Strains for a discussion of the factors afect-
ing red color in guppies.
In some strains the best female is not the one with the darkest red
ins, but rather with pink or lavender ins with a slight mosaic pat-
tern.
Half-Black Genetics
Improving the red color is usually accomplished by breeding blond-
bodied (bb) Solid Red males with gray-bodied Half-Black Red
females. his produces an excellent F1 generation, all half-black. he
males are then bred back to original Half-Black females. It’s critical
that the female with the darkest half-black pattern be chosen, since
this cross does tend to lighten the half-black pattern, even as it is
cleaning up the red color. he females from the F1 generation of this
cross can be used to create a new gray-bodied Solid Red line. hey
are bred to homozygous (pure) blond (bb) Red males (called gold in
America). he F1 drop of this cross will yield about 25% gray-bodied
(bB) Solid Red of excellent quality. Half-Black Reds are also crossed
with Red Albinos.
Crossing a male Half-Black Red with a Red Albino female produces
an F1 generation that is gray-bodied Solid Red (assuming both
parental strains are homozygous). he red will be rich and dark. he
ins will be excellent. Crossing the other way (male Red Albino to
female Half-Black Red) is not as productive. he F1 generation is all
Half-Black red. If spots have been a problem with your line, and the
parental generations were good, this cross may clear up the spots.
Using bi-color or multicolor guppies with red in them is not usually a
good idea, unless you have a long time horizon and lots of tank space.
he pattern, once bred into your line, is very diicult to get rid of.
Half-Black Purple
HB Purple.
Most HB Purples that you see on the show bench tend to look very
dark, almost black. here is a lot of black pigment underneath the
purple pigment. he color purple is composed of red color mixed
with relected blue light.
196 | Half-Black or Tuxedo
COLOR STRUCTURE
he color purple is created by two color cells in the skin:
♦ blue light relecting iridophores
♦ red pigment color cells (erythrophores)
he iridophores are in the middle layer of the skin. he erythrophores
are above, acting like the color gel on theater lights. he mixture of
blue and red light produces purple color. Because these two colors
segregate separately, the quality of purple is afected by the density
and distribution of these two types of color cells.
BREEDERS COMMENTS
he strain is cross-compatible with blues and greens. Green is a
somewhat better cross than blue. he cross to blues tends to produce
dark Half-Black Blues or almost black Half-Black Purples.
One breeder suggests that the cross between Greens and Purples
works both ways. Purple is dominant over green. he cross also pro-
duces a portion of Blues.
To improve the Purples, cross a Purple male with a Green female.
Back cross to the Purple line, choosing a Purple female from the
hybrid cross. To do that, darken the lights in the ish room and shine
a lashlight on the females. here will be green and purple females,
showing green and purple crescents at the base of the peduncle
respectively.
With regard to the Half-Black Purples, the purple color tends to
become darker as the breeder selects for a dark half-black pattern. If
the breeder does not maintain one line for light purple color on the
ins and another line for dark half-black pattern, he or she might ind
themselves breeding the light purple color right out of the strain.
hey will then have to go to an out cross to try to lighten the purple
color.
As is the case for most Half-Black strains, the female is key. In most
Half-Black Purple strains, she carries the half-black gene. She can
also afect the darkness (blackness) of the male’s tail. he breeder
should choose females who have the darkest half-black pattern and
the lightest tails. Better still is to maintain two lines, one focused on
the half-black pattern, the other on the light purple color. Cross one
to the other to correct problems as they arise.
he best out cross is to a solid Purple strain. A Purple male is bred
to a Half-Black female with the darkest black half-black pattern and
the cleanest tail. his hybrid cross can produce show winners.
Guppy Color STrainS | 197
Half-Black Pastel
his HB Pastel was part of a tank entry that won irst place in a guppy show.
GENETICS
his strain has a number of genes in it’s make-up, including the half-
black gene that gives it the half-black peduncle. Most HB pastels
seen on the show bench are the F1 generation hybrids from recent
out crosses, since this strain tends to get very small, very quickly
without the regular infusion of new gene stock.
his strain is used to “clean up” Yellows. he two strains have been
interbred enough so they are genetically closely related.
he genetics of the ins is probably similar to half-black yellows and
involve Full Platinum genetics.
BREEDERS COMMENTS
he Half-Black Pastels have perhaps one of the tightest and most
stable genetics. hey are often used in crosses because of this. How-
ever, ironically, they are not easy to breed because the purity of the
pastel color on the ins is easily lost.
A problem plaguing many American Half-Black Pastel lines is
infertility and a decrease in size after a couple of generations of close
inbreeding. Some breeders use the blond (bb) Half-Black White
to increase the size and ins of their grey-bodied line and to ix the
fertility problem. A blond Half-Black White male is bred to a grey
Half-Black Pastel female. his produces washed-out ofspring. he
best of the males are selected from the cross and bred to blond Half-
Black White females. his is said to produce a bigger, more vigorous
line.
Half-Black Pastels beneit from a good line breeding program. At a
minimum keep two lines going, crossing brother to sister for three
generations and then crossing the lines. When selecting male breed-
ers, the largest bodied males are not the best choice as they often
have fertility problems. Use the largest females to maintain size.
Show quality selective breeders recommend that the aquarist intro-
duce their male and female breeding stock to each other at the three
month mark of development, as older virgin females become harder
for the males to impregnate.
he Half-Black gene is most often found on the X-chromosome.
he Half-Black Pastel male is sometimes bred to lace Snakeskin
females with the snakeskin pattern on the X-chromosome. his
produces Half-Black AOC ofspring with poor spotted patterns. he
American breeder Luke Roebuck prefers to do the cross the other
way. He suggests the lace snakeskins are preferable to those showing
Guppy Color STrainS | 199
the Cobra pattern, as the lace pattern is more recessive. “A good Rus-
sian Metal Lace may be even better because the metal head would
control the surface area expression of the half-black color to about
50%, which is desirable.” Luke is referring to the member of the
Moscow family that has the Moscow blue on the front part of the
body and Snakeskin pattern on the second half.
Half-Black White
that are still called Half-Black Yellow, even though they do not have
any yellow on them. For example the Japanese Half-Black Pastels of-
ten go by this name. he German Yellow Tuxedo has been a mainstay
of Japanese strains.
he Asian style tuxedos (half-blacks) often include color in the front
part of the body. In this case the guppy has both genes for the half-
black white patterns as well as the White Saddle gene which spreads
leucophores on the guppy’s dorsal area.
GENETICS
he Japanese love of crossing strains is exempliied in the many Japa-
nese strains that have arisen out of the original German Half-Black
Yellow stock. For example, the original strain was crossed to Half-
Black Reds. he Neon Tuxedo has silver hues on the back and has a
delta caudal in. he Japanese author and breeder Iwasaki speculates
that it is a result of crossing a Red Tuxedo with a Singapore Neon
Blue guppy. Iwasaki: “Crossing a German Yellow Tuxedo with a
Tiger Bottom Sword produces wonderful silver-backed Red Tail
Tuxedos, but the ish are weak, and in the F2 generation so weak as
to mostly die out.” Iwasaki’s reference is to strains that predate 1989.
his is the albino (Real Red Eye Albino or RREA) version of the
strain. It would be called an RREA Yellow Tuxedo in Asia.
his version has the white saddle gene.
202 | Half-Black or Tuxedo
GENETICS
he putative genotype for this strain is as follows:
XYWt Ws Ni aa Where Wt = White Tail, Ws = White Saddle, Ni = half-black, a = albino
Half-Black Green
HB Green.
BREEDERS COMMENTS
Philip Shaddock
As is the case for most Half-Black strains, the female is key. She can
also afect the darkness (blackness) of the male’s tail. he breeder
should choose females who have the darkest half-black pattern and
the lightest tails. Better still is to maintain two lines, one focused on
the half-black pattern, the other on the light green color. Cross one
to the other to correct problems as they arise.
his particular strain of the HB Green guppy has a gene called the
Onyx gene (so named by Dr. José René Meléndez Berríos). his
autosomal recessive gene is used to deepen the black peduncle of the
strain. he females in a drop can vary from a female with a moder-
ately black peduncle to a female that is jet black from the nose to the
tail, with only the belly in silver. I have transferred the gene to other
strains. A black Moscow was created that does not fade on the judg-
ing bench, as well as a “two-tone” black Moscow with a black body
and green ins.
Black Half-Black
his is a guppy that has black ins and a half-black pattern on the
peduncle.
16 Solid Color
Take away the half-black gene from many of the strains in the previ-
ous chapter and you are left with solid color strains.
he solid color is not as even and complete as Full Color Moscows
or Full Reds. In general the front of the body is weak in the overall
color.
GENETICS
Since blue color comes from blue relecting iridophores, and there are
many possible types and conigurations of iridophores (blue, green,
yellow, white, silver) with varying degrees of density and thickness,
there is great variance in the quality of the blue.
his is a Green (called Florida Green) guppy descended from a Gorski green. he bluish color is due
partly to lighting. It was shot in full sunlight. Under a lourescent light it would look a lot greener.
Compare this guppy to the one below. Photo by Philip Shaddock.
DESCRIPTION
Solid Greens are an old strain. And one of the oldest Green strains
is the “Parish Green.” his strain was originally characterized as
large and hardy, although inbreeding has probably changed that. he
breeder Hutter developed a green with a matching dorsal, which was
further developed by Regent. Hutter greens tend to be smaller and
more brilliant in color, and less hardy. “Parrish Greens” is a term that
often refers to guppies with white spotting or streaking in the dorsal,
while “Hutter Greens” have come to refer to greens with matching
dorsals.
his must be one of the most DQ’d (disqualiied) guppies at Ameri-
can guppy shows. he green guppy in the breeder’s tank appears
under the show lighting as a blue or purple guppy. he reason lies in
Guppy Color STrainS | 209
Parish Green . he two guppies are related. hey are both descended from the original Parrish Green.
the lightest tails. Better still is to maintain two lines, one focused on
the half-black pattern, the other on the light green color. Cross one
to the other to correct problems as they arise.
In crossing with Snakeskins cross a Snake male with a ine lace pat-
tern to the Green female. he snake pattern may be coarse in the irst
generation, depending on the genetics of the Snakeskin. he usual
advice is to cross back to the Snake line in subsequent generations.
American breeders call this a “bronze” guppy. But its actual scientiic
description is “golden.” hat mutation alters the expression of black
in the guppy, creating an exaggerated reticulation pattern in the body
and spotted ins. he golden mutation is autosomal recessive.
| 213
17 Colorless Strains
Albino Blau
his Taiwanese version of the strain has the body genetics (big body
and ins) of the American strains and the color genetics of an Asian
guppy. It is related to the common Singapore farm blue neon “tux-
edo” guppy found in ish stores everywhere. But the use of American
genes in combination with Asian genetics has produced a stunner.
214 | Colorless Strains
Super White
Also known as RREA Super White, Triple Recessive, Genetic
Guppy Color STrainS | 215
his version of a white guppy has a form of albinism that allows it to partially display melanin in its
eyes, called lutino or ruby-eye or wine-red. Courtesy of Uthen Chaichot. Also called a Lutino White.
his is a Super White that has the WREA (Wine Red Eye Albino)
gene instead of the albino gene. he WREA gene allows some black
pigment to be made. You see this mostly in the eye, which is colored
dark red, like a red wine.
See-thru
In 2008 I set out to create a guppy with all the colors genetically
removed. he result was the See-thru guppy.
Guppy Color STrainS | 217
Blond See-thru
he female at the top of this picture is a white blond See-thru guppy.
She is white because the yellow color cells cannot be expressed when
the Asian Blau gene is homozygous. Her black eyes distinguish her
from her albino See-thru related strain.
GENETICS
he strain was created by back crosssing a male See-thru to one of
the See-thru founding strains, a female blond Glass Belly Panda. he
two guppies at the bottom of the picture are also blond See-thrus but
they are not homozygous for the Asian Blau gene so they show a lot
of yellow.
he white female has the following genotype:
Guppy Color STrainS | 219
bb AbAb gbgb
he bottom guppies are:
bb Abab gbgb
his strain is said to be from Rio Leao near Santa Catarina in the
southern part of Brazil. Guppies are not native in this area of South
America, so it must be assumed they were introduced into the Rio
Leao at some point in the past.
he males have three red spots on the body, plus iridescent blue and
green in the peduncle area. he females are colorless. he strain is
quite small, as is the case with most wild guppies.
222 | Variegated, Wild and Endler
Istanbul
I obtained this guppy from Dr. Felix Breden at the Breden Lab,
Simon Fraser University. He told me he acquired it from the Max
224 | Variegated, Wild and Endler
Vienna Emerald Green Swordtail. Picture by Philip Shaddock. he “emerald green” color shows here
as blue.
A Vienna Emerald Green guppy at a Danish guppy show. Picture by Finn Bindeballe.
According to the European standard for this guppy, the ideal overall
color is metallic green. However it often has a golden yellow metallic
color in the forebody. (his may be the Schimmelpfennig Platinum
gene.) he black pattern on the body is best described with the Ger-
man word “mäanderförmigen,” which can be roughly translated as a
“meandering form,” having a wavy pattern like a ribbon in the breeze
or a river wandering over a plain.
he best examples of the strain should also have a “Peacock Butterly”
(black eye spot with iridescent edge) pattern on the caudal in. he
in coloring can vary from whitish yellow, red to blue hues (often very
pastel) with a black seam at the outer edges of the in. Genuine Vi-
enna Emerald Greens with these colors are now relatively rare. his
strain is now found in lower sword or double sword variations. here
has not been an upper sword version of this strain.
he European standard also calls for a vertical pattern of bars in the
middle of the body. his is said not be be a Zebrinus or bar gene. It is
autosomal.
GENETICS
Females of this strain tend to be colorless and are widely used to
improve the body shape and in shape of other swordtails.
his is said to the foundation strain for modern swordtails. he “Old
Fashioned” Japanese guppy is essentially a delta tail version of the Vi-
226 | Variegated, Wild and Endler
enna Emerald genetics. he Coral Red and Platinum strains are said
to be mutations of this strain. Additionally there is a version with
blue in the peduncle area, said to be a Y-linked recessive allele.
he strain gets its name from an intense green metallic color at the
base of the peduncle, spreading into the rest of the body. It is called
the “Emerald Green Iridescent” or EGI. he color is Y-linked, mak-
ing it a kind of genetic marker, since the trait is passed on from father
to son. It can be X-linked.
he Schimmelpfennig Platinum sword is another mutation out of
this strain. It has a blue background color similar to the blue variants
of this strain.
Old Fashioned
According to Yasube, a Japanese member of the Guppy Designer
forum, it is common knowledge in Japan that the strain got its name
from a guppy shop staf member who liked the old rock group hree
Dog Night song called, “An Old Fashioned Love Song.”
A cross between a Vienna Emerald Green and an IFGA Green. Philip Shaddock
Old-Fashioned Blue Tail from Tomoko Young’s ish room. Tomoko acquired the strain from Bruce
(Hsueh Tseng-Biao) in Taiwan. he strain comes from Japan.
228 | Variegated, Wild and Endler
Tangerine Guppy
According to Junichi Ito, the Tangerine guppy combines the magenta
gene with the Endler. his is what gives the strain its distinctive tan-
gerine color. A guppy (poecilia reticulata) combined with the magenta
gene gives the guppy a magenta color.
he fact that the Endler with the magenta gene is a diferent color
than the guppy with the Endler gene is interesting. It means that
the Endler must have diferent color cells than the guppy, or there
is a diference in the way the color cells are regulated. he Endler is
known to have much more intense color, which suggests that the dif-
ference must be in the way color is regulated.
White Tangerine
Balloon Guppy
Other names for this guppy are Bubble Guppy or Short Guppy.
his is a guppy that appeared in a cross I did between a Half-Black
Yellow male and a hai Midnight Black Moscow. he two “balloon
guppy” individuals appeared in the F2 generation.
his is not so much a strain of guppies as a developmental anomaly.
he guppy’s length is dramatically shortened by a deformed spinal
chord, where the vertebrae are apparently fused.
In the pet trade there is a type of Molly called a “Balloon Molly,”
hence the name for this type of guppy.
he Balloon guppy makes its appearance in the hobby occasionally,
then disappears. here is apparently too many “beautiful” mutations
available to the hobbyist to make this mutation attractive.
GENETICS
he Breden Lab at SFU, which does scoliosis research, is studying
this particular pair and its descendants.
he Aquarium Wiki has an interesting article that sheds some light
on this type of guppy.
Balloon is a generic term used to describe various ish species
(usually freshwater species) which through careful selection to
enhance and stabilise a genetic deformity that makes the overall
ish body much shorter and rounder in shape, hence the name.
his is done as the ish shape is pleasing to people. Side efects
are that the animal will be slower in swimming and tend to have
swim bladder problems (infections and less ability to adjust its
height in the water column). It often tends to have digestive
problems as the stomach and intestines are distorted within
Guppy Color STrainS | 233
he fact that the molly and goldish breeders are able to selectively
breed for this trait suggests the deformity is genetic and inheritable.
Breeding of this particular strain is diicult. Look closely at the
male’s gonopodium and you will see it is also deformed. he female
will have to be impregnated by one of her normally shaped brothers.
It is most likely an autosomal recessive condition, so balloon gup-
234 | Variegated, Wild and Endler
pies will appear at a ratio of 1:4 in the F2 generation. I have read one
report that the trait is dominant, but I am not sure of its validity.
A appendix: Gene Sym-
bols
Many of the entries in the Guppy Color Bank include formulas (genotypes)
that show the genes that participate in the networks that generate guppy
color and patterns and where the genes are located. his section will help
you interpret the formulas.
Autosomal Notation
Gene symbols look like this:
aa
he letter “a” is the irst letter of the name of the mutation (albino in this
case). It is shown as two letters because guppies have two sets of chromo-
somes and therefore two alleles.
he wild type form of the gene is indicated by capital letters:
AA or A/-
Aa
he phenotype of the hybrid guppy would be grey, and the genotype would
be Aa.
236 | Gene Symbols
Sex-Linked Notation
Unlike the case of the autosomal genes, genes on the sex chromosomes only
require one of the genes to be indicated. A gene on an X and Y chromo-
somes is represented as (using the Moscow mutation as an example):
XYMw
his indicates the guppy has the Moscow (Mw) gene on the Y chromosome.
he gene symbol is capitalized to indicate it is dominant over its wild-type
allele.
Because genes can cross over to the opposite chromosome during sexual
reproduction, the genotype shows the most common location of the gene.
| 237
Symbol Location
Sex-Linked Body Colors
Bcp (Black Caudal Peduncle) Bcp XY
Blue Diamond or Luster Bd XY
Coral Red (Neon in Europe) Co Y
Emerald Green Iridescent SmIr Y
Japan Blue (Aquamarine in Asia) A XY
Moscow Mw Y
Half-Black (Nigrocaudatus Ni) Ni or NiII XY
Half-Tuxedo (Saddleback) Ht XY
Pink White Pw XY
Schimmelpfennig Platinum Sc XY
Snakeskin body Ssb XY
Turqoise T Y
Viridis Vir Y
White Saddle Ws XY
Autosomal Body Colors
Albino (RREA - Real Red Eye Albino) a autosomal
Bar bar autosomal
Asian Blau Ab autosomal
Blond (Gold in the U.S. and Asia) b autosomal
Glass Belly gb autosomal
Golden (Gold Europe, Bronze U.S., Tiger Asia) g autosomal
Magenta M autosomal
Metallic gold Mg autosomal
Midnight Black mid autosomal
238 | Gene Table
Onyx on autosomal
Pink / Pingu pk autosomal
Solid (Micariff) So autosomal
Störzbach Metal s autosomal
Zebrinus Ze autosomal
Fin Shape
Elongated Dorsal or Hi-Fin Eld autosomal
Fantail Fa X
Pintail / Needletail Pt X
Ribbon / Giessen Rib autosomal
Roundtail Rndt XY
Spadetail Spt XY
Speartail Sp X
Suppressor Sup autosomal
Swallow kal autosomal
Double Sword Ds Ds
Fin Color and Pattern
Black Tail Bt XY
Blue Tail Blt XY
Flavus Fla XY
Grass Gra XY
Green Tail Grt XY