I think we are doing just that, someone asked for info on sex linked dermal inhibitor(wildtype form found on blue egg layers) which is related to this porject and they get the answerlets stay on topic witch is the blue egg layers
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I think we are doing just that, someone asked for info on sex linked dermal inhibitor(wildtype form found on blue egg layers) which is related to this porject and they get the answerlets stay on topic witch is the blue egg layers
this is staying on topic ????what will you see?
was an honest question, guys just ask I´ll be lurking around here, there is no such a thing as a dumb questionthis is staying on topic ????
having worked with production type white leghorns(not from hatcheries but directly from the battery cages) I could answer some questions...
second question: there is only afew documented recessive traits found so far on the white leghorns, some white leghorns do carry recessive white, but the white bird that was hatch can also be obtain by homozygous blue (Splash), mottled birds can also be expected but hey blue mottle is cool too right? all of the other recessive mutations that results in the dilution of melanins(black feathers) that have been already documented like recessive gray, lavender, pink eye, Erminette, partial feather achromatosis, recessive chocolate have NOT been found on production type white leghorns so far and were originally found on other breeds(R.D Crawford PB/G)
third: these birds are mostly leghorn at this stage(does not take too long to get back at that stage) and their leghorn blood is not just any other leghorn you can find on even on the best backyard breeders that keep good egg laying records, heck not even hatchery type leghorns lay as much as the battery type leghorns, these birds are able to lay 300+ eggs but with the right settings, meaning if you wont give them 16+ of artificial day light, just dont expect them to break the 300 egg mark, but they will out lay anything you could possibly imagine
forth: you can also expect to hatch a single combed wyandotte from time to time, just cull them, thats all
fith: yellow shanks are NOT recessive to slate shanks, its the other way around, they are dominant, if you are hatching chicks with yellow shanks(clear shanks) its because the breeder is doing this on purpose, yellow shanked birds should be culled on the spot, or use only on grand parent lines(slate shank blue egg layer cross with a heterozygous yellow shank blue egg layer will yield 50% slate colored shank birds and 50% yellow shank colored birds) and only slate colored parents must be used on parent lines(birds that will lay the hatching eggs people will get on the mail)
thats it...
clearly slate-black legs = white skin witch is donanat wille yelow leg = yelow skin whitch is resesiveHere are some facts.
White skin, (W) is dominant to yellow skin (w) in all cases (Genetics of the Fowl, pg 151, Hutt, 1949).
Shades of color in the shanks are due to a combination of the melanin in the varying dermal layers of the skin.
1) White shanks= white skin (W) with no melanin in the epidermal layer of the shanks.
2) Yellow shanks= yellow skin (w) with no melanin in the epidermal layer of the shanks.
3) Bluish= White skinned bird (W) not obscured by melanin in the epidermis but influenced by its presence.
4) Slate or Black= in white skinned (W) birds, when partially or wholly obscured by the epidermal melanin.
5) Willow, or Green= in yellow skinned (w) birds, from the mixture of dermal melanin and epidermal xanthophyl.
The various shading and degree of shading of the slate or willow color will depend upon the level of melanin in one or all of the three dermal layers of the skin. But the facts are , the basil white skin (W) is dominant to yellow skin (w).
References:
Genetics of the Fowl, E. B. Hutt, Chapter 6, Variations in the Color of the Skin, pg 149-161, 1949
let me help you out, "Clear yellow/white shanks" are dominant over dark Slate/Willow shanks,as i said bofore yelow legs are ressive so we can expect to hatch more yelow leged chicks as well as willow and slate
yelow and white are not the same thing white shanks are donantat wile yelow shanks are ressivelet me help you out, "Clear yellow/white shanks" are dominant over dark Slate/Willow shanks,
yellow skin is recessive to white skin that is a fact, but we are not talking about skin color here, right? but we are talking about dark willow/slate colored shanks right?
lets imagine(virtual world) that the blue egg layer in the future will have dark willow shanks instead of slate shanks but clear yellow shanks are a DQ aswell as clear white shanks(white skin will be a DQ in this virtual scenario)
what happens if you cross a clear yellow shanked rooster to a dark willow shanked hen(both brids will be from the Blue egger project), guess what happens? all of the hens(w Id/-) will have clear yellow shanks, and ALL fo the boys will also have clear yellow shanks, is that what the blue egg layer project wants? no.... the blue egg layer project wants dark willow shanks
that much is true my friend(except the bolded part, I thought we had cleared that up before)....yelow and white are not the same thing white shanks are donantat wile yelow shanks are ressive
so let me help you out you are confusizing white/clear legs with yellow and just an FYI skin color is leg color
white skin bird = white shanks or blue shanks or slate shanks but a white skined bird will not have yelow shanks
yelow skin bird = yellow shanks or willow shanks but a yellow skin bird will not have white shanks
oh I forgot about that henk, thanks,*=can be yellow in young chicks up to a few weeks. Don't cull too early...![]()
lets stay on topic witch is the blue egg layers
clearly slate-black legs = white skin witch is donanat wille yelow leg = yelow skin whitch is resesive
the blue egg layers i have i have both slate legs, wilow legs,and yelow legs , and as i said bofore yelow legs are ressive so we can expect to hatch more yelow leged chicks as well as willow and slate