Chocolate Orpingtons

RioLindoAz

Sleeping
13 Years
Jul 8, 2007
2,479
17
281
Yuma, Arizona
Chocolate Orpingtons have been a great desire of mine for the past few weeks. There so, I've done a lot of research of this mutation and have found several dead ends. My first question is...Is there a difference between Chocolate Orpingtons and Brown Orpingtons? I know true Chocolate Orpingtons come from a gene in Blacks called CHOC, that when pure, dilutes black to the Chocolate color. But I've also found many reports of "Browns" coming from blue and buff parents. Would this bird still be considered a Chocolate Orpington even though It doesn't really Carry the CHOC gene? Also, would this color be inforced by crossing it with a white or Black orpington? If people start Pushing this color variation, would they be striving for a deep, dark brown...Or will people be striving to perfect a lighter shade of brown?

Feel free to discuss Chocolate Orpingtons as you please, though I really hope this helps clear some questions many of us have.




A Photo From CHIRPY CHICKS
http://chirpychicks.com/
Choc%20cock%20copyright%20website.jpg



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^Thanks, knjinnm for gathering this information for us!^
 
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My bantam Mauve Orpingon went broody & hatched 3 chicks!
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Blue split to Chocolate cockerel on the left, Chocolate pullet on the right.


Splash- don't know whether this is a male or female yet. If a boy, he'll be Splash split to Chocolate, if a girl she will be Mauve (Chocolate & Blue), with 2 copies of the Blue gene.


Always right next to momma, who wouldn't hold still for the camera.
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They're plotting something...
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Chubby lil' Blue & Chocolate chicks.
 
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Can you explain what "Ground leakage" is to a novice?
Thanks

Ground color is Gold/Silver.

leakage of ground color is when a solid eumelanized bird is showing some gold/silver color where solid black feathers should be(including eumelanin diluters like Blue, lavender, dunn, chocolate, dominant white, recessive white, Splash). what causes this? its believed that the lack of melanizers or heterozygosity of E/ER allele.
 
Thanks for the comments. I think some if not all of the color effect you're seeing results from six months of bleaching in the Florida sun. Quite a few of our birds --jubilee Orpingtons, buff Sussex, etc.-- show a pronounced bleaching effect in this environment. Another pic from today:


chocolateorps065.jpg
 

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