Carlton
Chameleon Enthusiast
Of course, everything in the wild is random and more than likely it happens every now and then. What I'm talking about is deliberate in-breeding or line breeding to bring out certain traits. In the wild they are just trying to reproduce so their specie doesn't die off.
And, if a group of chams happens to become inbred due to geographic isolation and small gene pool, animals with a magnified weakness are quickly picked off by circumstance and predators. What concerns me with in-line or inbreeding in captivity is that animals who end up demonstrating a trait the breeder wants but who also carry an undesirable trait (for example sensitivity to certain diseases, poor immune system, tendency for MBD) DON'T get eliminated from the gene pool unless the breeder carefully documents any patterns in illness, poor development, longevity, etc. You could argue that captive animals don't need to be in prime physical condition to survive, but why sentence any captive animal to a shortened miserable life because of a breeding defect?
We may not be seeing all the physiological problems that are now common in dogs or cats, but we are working with many fewer generations than in a dog breed recognized for a hundred years or more. The day will come for chams eventually unless we are very careful. We may see that beautiful blue color without problems now, but eventually other problems will tag along.
I guess I don't agree that our current gene pool of any of the captive cham species is all that robust. The populations are pretty small and number of founders is also.
One other little comment and I will be quiet (not being an active breeder myself). Are grandparent and grandchild distant relatives? No way. They are one step removed from "immediate family" IMHO. A "distant" relative is something like a second cousin.