For years I’ve misheard Kurt Cobains lyrics “A mulatto. An albino.” Thinking he was saying something deeper like “I’m mulatto, and albino” seeing as they’d make him white.
My question is, can you be albino and mulatto, or black, hispanic, asian ect. I’m sure since albino aligators, snakes, and turtles are fairly common that it could affect other races than white, but I’ve never seen them. Would it dull the pigment, or get rid of it entirely? Can the Albino trait be passed on? If so, do both partners have to be albino? What if only one is?
I don’t know exactly know the answers to your questions, but I do know that albinism is most common in people of African descent. And I have personally known an albino of Hispanic descent. Does that help at all?
Well, there is such a thing as an albino Negro.
Picture.
http://www.wits.ac.za/fac/med/gen/disease.htm
http://www.wits.ac.za/fac/med/gen/genet_disorders_lista-d.htm
If you want to know more, it’s on Google under “albinism blacks”.
“Albinism negro” just gets you Darwin’s quote about albino blacks in Africa.
About albinism. It’s genetic.
How you figger albinism occurring across species has anything to do with it occurring across ethnic groups within a species?
I have seen two albino Asians. They had yellow-white hair and light, almost Caucasian-like, skin tone. Don’t know about their eye color (or lack thereof), as one always wore tinted glasses and I never got a good look at the other’s. I could tell they were Asian, though, because they had Asian features, had Asian surnames, hung around other Asians, were from predominantly Asian neighborhoods, etc. (Okay, so that’s not overwhelming evidence they were Asian, but having not had the chance to ask them directly, that’s the best I can do.)
Obligatory helpful link: http://www.albinism.org/report.html
Upon preview-- darn it, DDG!
i know of one albino black person. how could i tell? he has the nappy black hair, which actually happens to be blond and dreadlocked. he also has the black features as i do. For the longest time i thought he was a white guy…until i REALLY looked at him.
I have a very good friend who is a mulatto albino. He’s from Puerto Rico. He does look a bit odd. It’s nearly impossible to guess what his ethnic background is without the cues from skin and hair color. It is hereditary.
The highest rate of albinism in the world occurs in the Kuna Indians of Panama, the “White Indians of Darien.” I have heard the rate quoted as one in 200, and certainly albinos are very commonly seen among them. They are in a sense partial albinos, having pale yellow hair (not pure white) and I believe blue, not pink, eyes.
I have seen several albino Africans, in both Cameroon and Gabon. I expect that albinism occurs to some extent in all human populations.