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Quote: Great details Karen. Now I know why you are emphatic about this coloring. I need to go pound nails and mull this over.
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Quote: Great details Karen. Now I know why you are emphatic about this coloring. I need to go pound nails and mull this over.
The BBR is a completely recessive color palette. There are no hypostatic genes in BBR. Every other color gene other than s+ or s- corrupts BBR and BBR disappears to one extent or another. The wonderful thing about BBR is...if one can get it in its pure-breeding state... it just self-replicates. No color balancing , no worries about winnowing or adding other genes. BBR is already completely winnowed for color. It's why it fascinates me. The thought of a self-replicating color so I could just spend my time breeding to type instead. Ah, what a genetic luxury! ( and such pretty chicks too!)BBR is regarded as the most basic color. Because it is a bird, more genes are in effect than just the red Some thing allows the black breast to show in the phenotype and something effects the wing color separating it from the Black copper marans.
Maybe they are all homozygous. And either recessive or dominant. But the loci for the other genes that effect color must have an allele.
Quote: THanks for confirming. I am learning!!
Yes, I did study 3 breed rotational crosses and adapted the system to strain-crossing instead of breed crossing. Yes, finding the three veteran linebred strains was difficult. It took me 2 years to find them , vet them for health, and cross balance all three lines for Health Type and Temperament in order of their excellence from greater to a lesser extent.Karen: This was an interesting read. I've had a very good rottie, she and all her litter mates closely resemble the father. IT was like looking at clones by the time they were 6 months old. THe breeder had a very good b--itch and was quite large at 100#. All the pups finished about 80#, noticably smaller like the father.
THe collie get become a three breed hybrid. I'm thinking the 3 breed rotational system is a compromise. To make the triple hybrid there must be three linebred or inbred lines to work with. Long term, perhaps there is a place for all the methods and each has it's value at given points in continuing or developing productive lines. Make sense?

