Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: johnsd16]
#851620
08/25/08 09:08 PM
08/25/08 09:08 PM
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Joined: Mar 2007
McGrath, AK
white17

"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
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"General (Mr.Sunshine) Washington"
Joined: Mar 2007
McGrath, AK
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Your just having a hard time with this ain't ya John, LOL
No temperature does have nothing to do with a pelts priming up! I'm not the one having a hard time with it. White17 is saying it POSSIBLY does, but either he won't outright say it or doesn't realize he's saying it. You apparently misunderstand . I am saying temperature has nothing to do with it.
Mean As Nails
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Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: white17]
#851660
08/25/08 09:24 PM
08/25/08 09:24 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
ID-40
johnsd16
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
ID-40
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Your just having a hard time with this ain't ya John, LOL
No temperature does have nothing to do with a pelts priming up! I'm not the one having a hard time with it. White17 is saying it POSSIBLY does, but either he won't outright say it or doesn't realize he's saying it. You apparently misunderstand . I am saying temperature has nothing to do with it. Whoa, whoa, whoa, reeeeeeeeeeeewind. You said WIND "POSSIBLY" has something to do with it, but absolutely NOT temperature! Now that is tooooooooo funny.
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Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: don Wolf]
#852018
08/26/08 12:45 AM
08/26/08 12:45 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Corrales NM
Wackyquacker
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Corrales NM
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The theory of light (actually dark) induced hair growth has been presented from about every angle possible and in physiological if not molecular detail and at dang near every reading grade level, i.e. vocabulary; yet you want it to be something else. How about YOU present a mechanism for altitude or temperature based induction. Something like maybe; at high altitude the pigment facillitated transduction of electromagnetic energy to chemical bond energy is slowed do to the gradual decrease / increase of gravitational pull from the moon that must occur as we approach the equinox. This reduction in rate of bond formation stimulates the release of FSH (follicle stimulating hormone)from the pituitary gland which causes fur to prime.
Last edited by Wackyquacker; 08/26/08 12:47 AM.
Hard tellin not knowin
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Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: Wackyquacker]
#852140
08/26/08 06:34 AM
08/26/08 06:34 AM
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Joe B
Unregistered
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Joe B
Unregistered
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If that old coon were blind in both eyes he would stay prime all year round! LOL LOL
... and a blind dog never sheds his winter coat!!!
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Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: Wackyquacker]
#852278
08/26/08 09:19 AM
08/26/08 09:19 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
ID-40
johnsd16
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
ID-40
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This reduction in rate of bond formation stimulates the release of FSH (follicle stimulating hormone)from the pituitary gland which causes fur to prime.
Oh my gosh, now you guys have really lost me. NOW the coon is going to ovulate. Whoa, I really don't get it now. Now you're telling me that the fur priming coincides with the coon breeding cycle.
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Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: white17]
#852303
08/26/08 09:42 AM
08/26/08 09:42 AM
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Joined: Jan 2007
backwoods N. Wi.
Fox Claw
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
backwoods N. Wi.
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So lets not confuse pelt priming (skin side) with the quality of the fur. Two different things here. I'm still following this post, its still intriguing. White17, great, informative posts. I think I read your post correctly, and I think your saying that the loss of daylight (and the insuing endocrine response) is what turns the skin side from blue to white. I can agree with this 100%. Others here seem to be using a diffrent definition of "prime." Most people seem to be using the hair side at its peak of thickness and fluffiness, as the defining characteristic of "prime." Anyway, I just realized that your right, these are "two diffrent things" , completly diffrent things. This alone may be part of the problem. Back to the Texas yote brought to minnesota. Let's say we brought a few truck loads of them up here and keep them isolated from the locals. Let's also assume that we kept them here for many generations. In the end, I think we'd all agree that they will have a thicker coat than the orininals brought from texas, but why is that? It's because each and every year, every generation, will have a few animals that develop a thicker, fuller, warmer coat on their own. These animals will be the likliest to survive and will be the most sucessful breeders. This slow adaptation, on a yearly basis, is what will result in the thicker coat of the entire population. Its natural selection, as a result of temprature, that will change the coat geneticly. Evolution proves that temprature has an effect on animals hair growth on a yearly basis. As far as the time of year (within days) that the skin turns blue to white, I can't see how temprature would effect that. Other than the obvious fact that the further from the equator you get the colder it gets, and therefore the less daylight in winter. Sort of a "which came first - chicken or egg" argument. Seems like everyone here is more in aggrement than they realize, more a matter of syntax than anything else.
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Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: Fox Claw]
#852423
08/26/08 11:36 AM
08/26/08 11:36 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
ID-40
johnsd16
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
ID-40
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[quote=white17] Back to the Texas yote brought to minnesota. Let's say we brought a few truck loads of them up here and keep them isolated from the locals. Let's also assume that we kept them here for many generations. In the end, I think we'd all agree that they will have a thicker coat than the orininals brought from texas, but why is that? It's because each and every year, every generation, will have a few animals that develop a thicker, fuller, warmer coat on their own. These animals will be the likliest to survive and will be the most sucessful breeders. This slow adaptation, on a yearly basis, is what will result in the thicker coat of the entire population. Its natural selection, as a result of temprature, that will change the coat geneticly. Evolution proves that temprature has an effect on animals hair growth on a yearly basis.
I don't think we'd all agree. I might, but no one else would agree with you. Whisker........ I think I love you.
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Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: Fox Claw]
#852588
08/26/08 01:31 PM
08/26/08 01:31 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Logan County KY
mark
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Logan County KY
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Don, had you got in on the beginning of this, it would be on page 3 by now, and the other 150 or so posts wouldn't be here. Folks, don't worry about it, trap what you got, don't trap before your fur is prime (mid Nov in most places), and let nature do what nature does.
A "half truth" is still a whole lie.
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Re: What makes a fur turn prime....
[Re: johnsd16]
#852836
08/26/08 05:06 PM
08/26/08 05:06 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Corrales NM
Wackyquacker
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Corrales NM
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Oh my gosh, now you guys have really lost me. That wasn't too hard; since that portion of my post was a total spoof...you got the last portion on estrus but seemed to have missed photosynthesis...pigment facilitated... Again, if you disbelieve the relationship with hair growth and photoperiod what is your hypothesis to explain the observed changes collectively known as "priming"?
Hard tellin not knowin
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