- Nov 18, 2013
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I have a lemon cuckoo orp roo and a buff orp hen. I'm trying to get an idea what will result from the cross before I do it. Is the lemon cuckoo recessive? Thanks.
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im not arguing, just trying to explain (you have a good "scientific definition" but its not entirely accurate.) - there is some barring transferred as a non dominate gene at times. i dont know how, as i said i dont claim to be an expert. where it shows up most commonly is on Ideal leghorns. breeding 2 white birds will sometimes give barred offspring. ive had and heard about, both males and females coming out barred.Louveouerbirds really doesn't understand this at all. If your male barred bird is homozygous for the barring gene (two copies) It will pass on one copy to all of its offspring. If the female is non-barred then ALL offspring will be barred since barring is a dominant gene it will be expressed with just one copy. If the male is heterozygous ( one copy) for the barring gene then there is a 50% CHANCE of any offspring receiving the barring gene regardless of sex. Barred females pass on the barring gene only to their male offspring because it is linked to the male chromosome which is passed on from female to male offspring in birds. They cannot pass it on to female young. Females NEVER, NEVER have two copies of sex-linked barring. They only receive one copy from their father and none from their mother.