6 toes on a Silkie??

Scratchn By

Songster
11 Years
Nov 7, 2008
227
2
119
East Texas
Hey experts!

Have you ever seen a Silkie with six toes? On each foot...

Actually, it's more like five split fifth. Two toe nails on one toe.

Looook! (Little blurred...)

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I don't believe they're from hatchery lines.

I'm assuming that means disqualify ? For show purposes, that is...

Around here DQ means Dairy Queen and people are more concerned with getting it super-sized.
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Obviously, I couldn't care less about poultry judging...
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I have 4 that I hatched from eggs that have 6 toes on each foot.
Pretty much they are now just pets, and I will probably end up
giving them away later. 3 out of the 4 are cockerels.
 
The polydactyl trait has a lot of variation in expression. Too many toes is not that uncommon a trait. If an otherwise good bird it's okay to breed it, especially if you have any 4-toed silkies to pair it with. If you see extra toes recurring in chicks, then you may want to stop using the bird for breeding.

There is an extreme variation where an entire extra set of toes occurs on top of the foot. We had one of those who otherwise was an extremely nice quality. We gave her to a pet home where she could be pretty yard candy and get the extra atttention she needed (she much preferred to find and stay in one place than to walk--even to food/water).

Incorrect number of toes (too few/too many) is a disqualification: DQ.
 
And do you find that common among hatchery lines? Is that a Silkie issue or will we find such occurrences in other breeds?

We only had one with this hatch. Cockerel? These eggs are not from our birds, but eggs we purchased. Not too sure of lineage... I will inquire.

Extra set... Now that's something I'd be interested in seeing. Do you have a photo
 
No photos, my son got her from a friend, but he sorta lost interest and so I gave her to someone who would give her more attention.

I've only ever had one hatchery silkie, so I can't say. Odd numbers of toes occasionally pop up, and I'd rather deal with too many toes than with poorly separated toes. Of course I'd rather have all perfect toes, but what can I say--perfect birds don't exist, and most judges are satified with the correct number and don't really care about placement.

I expect the five toed breeds all have this problem, but since silkies are hte only five toed breed I raise, that is speculation and nothing more.
 

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