Quote:
Incorrect. Genes are not dominant to each other. Different alleles of a gene are dominant or recessive in relationship towards each other.
Bl>bl+: blue is dominant to not-blue; C+>c>c>c^re>c^a: not-white is dominant to white, which is dominant to white with red eye, which is dominant to albino; H+>h: not-silkie is dominant to silkie; Pg>pg+: pattern gene is dominant to not-pattern-gene; Fm>fm+: Fibromelanosis is dominant to not-fibromelanosis; etc.
Blue is neither dominant nor recessive to white; not-silkie is neither dominant nor recessive to frizzle; pattern gene is neither dominant nor recessive to silver.
Another way of saying "not-white is dominant to white" is that white is recessive to not-white.
With a dominant allele, it matters not if a different, more recessive allele is present--the dominant allele controls. With a recessive allele, it only controls expression when a more dominant allele is not present.
A bird whose genotype is Cc+ or Cc^re or Cc^a will have the phenotype (appearance) of C: not-white
A bird who is c+c+ or c+c^re or c+c^a will have the phenotype of c+:white.
A bird who is c^re c^re or c^re c^a will have the phenotype of c^re:white with red eyes.
A bird who is c^a c^a will have the phenotype of c^a: albino.
White turns OFF the expression (display) of other colour or pattern genes present in the bird. A bird who has PgPg BlBl Bb didi mlml ArAr and c+c+ will be white. So will one who is pgpg blbl bb didi MlMl arar & c+c+. You hae no way of knowing which particular genesets are hiding behind the white. Breed to a non-white bird and the results are unpredictible.
Whew, I sure wish you had been there to sit by me in Chemistry
Incorrect. Genes are not dominant to each other. Different alleles of a gene are dominant or recessive in relationship towards each other.
Bl>bl+: blue is dominant to not-blue; C+>c>c>c^re>c^a: not-white is dominant to white, which is dominant to white with red eye, which is dominant to albino; H+>h: not-silkie is dominant to silkie; Pg>pg+: pattern gene is dominant to not-pattern-gene; Fm>fm+: Fibromelanosis is dominant to not-fibromelanosis; etc.
Blue is neither dominant nor recessive to white; not-silkie is neither dominant nor recessive to frizzle; pattern gene is neither dominant nor recessive to silver.
Another way of saying "not-white is dominant to white" is that white is recessive to not-white.
With a dominant allele, it matters not if a different, more recessive allele is present--the dominant allele controls. With a recessive allele, it only controls expression when a more dominant allele is not present.
A bird whose genotype is Cc+ or Cc^re or Cc^a will have the phenotype (appearance) of C: not-white
A bird who is c+c+ or c+c^re or c+c^a will have the phenotype of c+:white.
A bird who is c^re c^re or c^re c^a will have the phenotype of c^re:white with red eyes.
A bird who is c^a c^a will have the phenotype of c^a: albino.
White turns OFF the expression (display) of other colour or pattern genes present in the bird. A bird who has PgPg BlBl Bb didi mlml ArAr and c+c+ will be white. So will one who is pgpg blbl bb didi MlMl arar & c+c+. You hae no way of knowing which particular genesets are hiding behind the white. Breed to a non-white bird and the results are unpredictible.
Whew, I sure wish you had been there to sit by me in Chemistry