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Going to have to disagree on this one. Spangling and mottling are genetically different. Mottling is caused by a recessive gene called the mottling gene. The same gene causes the exchequer pattern also. Spangling is polygenic and due to the interaction of three homozygous genes dark brown, melanotic and pattern. Spangling is usually on birds that are birchen or brown at the E locus.Show or game people consider spangled to be white spots over colored background, and mottled to be white spots over black background. Genetically, they are one and the same.
No the birds are not silver. The father of the birds was gold duck wing (according to what I can determine) so any daughters he produces have to be gold. I agree with Gallorojo- they do appear to carry dominant white.Are these silver wheaten with dominant white?
Thank you Chris and Tim. I cannot make the chicken calculator come up with all the colors that I got when I bred those two together. Hopefully I am learning something. Usually when I caught up in trying to figure out what makes these colors I get a head ache and have to quit. I like genetics though and aim to try and understand these things. I guess that's one reason I keep asking these things. I have all these options for breeding to her and I still have not settled it in my mind, which of these is the best one to breed with her, to stay away from the color of this top picture. I have her in the pen with the silver/golden cockerel right now, my thought was to make more flashy wheatens, but (chicken quest calculator) shows the cockerels to come out like the top picture in various colors, Maybe that pattern isn't bad either, but I prefer to stay away from it.
I need your help and input. I have a head ache from too much thinking. Give me your advice.
I don't want this male color. Her hen's dominant white gene is very strong, 75% of the 70 chicks I hatched from her in 2012 were incomplete spangled and with her color. I want to try to stay away from that color.
I can promise you you wont get any birds like this. No matter how you cross them up. You either have spangled entered into the calcuator instead of mottled, or, you entered columbian or dark brown. Regardless, no worries, none of the parent stock had what it takes to make this pictured cock!!![]()