Hey guys I'm new here. I've bred New Zealands for about the past 10 hrs and recently got into standard rex for the fur quality. As many know they are slower growing.
I had an idea and I'm not sure if it's possible or how to go about it... is it possible to breed a rex with something that grows alot faster but will produce rabbits thay will have the rex fur?? So would I use a new Zealand buck and rex doe, then breed the back faster growing does to the new Zealand buck?? Then once i have the faster growing rabbit I breed the babies I like back to a rex buck to get the fur back??
I hope I'm making sense. Would it just be better to find some faster growing standard rex? I'm at like 3lbs at 8 weeks right now. Thanks!
My daughter is trying this right now with a Californian doe and a Rex buck. She's not looking for growth rate improvements, rather better depth and loin width in her Rex, but the principle is the same.
The first thing to realize is that you get what you breed, so yes, it's possible to succeed in what you're proposing. There are a couple of difficulties you will encounter, though, in general, and specific to that rex coat.
In my experience, when you cross a rex with a standard coat, it seems to take a very long time to get back to a good-quality rex coat. To be sure, you can get rex-coated babies in the F3 generation if you breed the F2 crosses back to their pure rex parents, but their coats tend to be thin and poor examples of rex. One of the reasons for this, is that part of what makes a rex coat so astounding is the incredible density (higher numbers of hairs per follicle). This density is linked to the genes for rex coat type, but is not an intergral part of the rex genome, i.e. you can get rex coats without the density.
Another issue is that the genes for rex coat type - there are at least three different versions - are recessive, so you know for sure that all of the F2 NZ x Rex babies (which will have standard commercial coats) carry a copy of that alelle. But if you breed those babies back to a pure NZ, statistically only 50% of the resulting F3 offsping will carry a copy; that means theoretically, all of them, half of them, none of them, or anywhere in between may carry it, and you won't know which they are. So to add NZ growth genetics to Rex, you'll need to keep breeding back to Rex as
@eco2pia notes, or do sibling crosses with the F2 bunnies (which is fine, IMHO, since the parents are about as unrelated as you'll get).
Additionally, NZs are a fair bit bigger than Rex, at least according to the ARBA Standard of Perfection: NZs are 9-12 pounds, while Rex are 7.5 -10.5 pounds. If you are not aiming for breeding to the standard, that shouldn't be a problem, although remember that the bigger the adults, the more they eat!
Increasing growth rates
without increasing adult size would be what I was after, myself!
I like genetic experiments, and as
@eco2pia just pointed out, you can eat your failures.
A much faster way to get to your goal would be to just find some faster-growing Rex stock. But that's not always possible or financially feasible, and you will likely learn a lot more by doing the experiment yourself.
Let us know what you end up doing!