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Barring is melanin inhibitors that prevent any coloration, meaning it looks white, in a regular pattern that presents in bars or zebra lines.
Cuckoo does not have clear zebra lines so the inhibitor is more diffused creating a messier look rather than crisp bars.
You can have have two barring or cuckoo genes or just one.
Two genes means wider white patterns. In pure breeds, males will have the double bars/cuckoo while females the single bars/cuckoo as the barring gene is on the Z chromosome which also determines the sex (ZZ male, ZW female).
I am not sure what the genetic difference between the cuckooing and barring other than some sort of location coding that creates a straight line and one that is more diffuse???
I will be interested if someone can tighten up that fact (and clean up any of mine).
My understanding.
LofMc
Thank you so very much. This was great helpI think I found the answer in the difference between barring and cuckooing...it is the difference in feather growth genetics.
Barring produces melanin inhibitor (white) for both barred and cuckoo. When coupled with faster feather growth genetics, it produces the crisper lines while slower produces the messier cuckooing.
http://www.hobbypoultry.com/the-barred-gene-use-in-chickens/
Genotypically the same gene, the barring gene, which is sexlinked. Sexlinked basically means the hen can only get one gene, which it gets from her father, and the cock can get two, so he gets one from his mother and his father.Been wondering what the difference between these two varieties genotypically and phenotypically.
Help woukd be greatly appreciated.![]()
What interaction is that?You also have an interaction involving the slow feathering allele associated with barred phenotype.