- Jan 18, 2010
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Chickanmanfromarkansas wrote:
White Hollands--- Lamonas----How neat, I'd love to help recreate both, but right now my resourses are not very good. Just getting back into chickens after a 12 year break. All mine are still baby chicks, will be 6 to 7 months before they even start to lay.
Just an idea. If you crossed say a white egg laying chicken breed (say Leghorn)over a brown egg layer (White Rock) would the offspring of the cross be white egg layer?
White Hollands--- Lamonas----How neat, I'd love to help recreate both, but right now my resourses are not very good. Just getting back into chickens after a 12 year break. All mine are still baby chicks, will be 6 to 7 months before they even start to lay.
Just an idea. If you crossed say a white egg laying chicken breed (say Leghorn)over a brown egg layer (White Rock) would the offspring of the cross be white egg layer?
To put it very simply: No. You would have white chickens laying light brown eggs. BUT if the offspring mated together, they would "theoretically - super simplified" have a 25% chance of producing white chickens laying white eggs. a 25% chance of white chickens laying brown eggs. and a 50% chance of white chickens laying light brown eggs.
The real genetics behind the color of chicken eggs has not been fully mapped out yet and there are lots of complications to the whole thing. But basically what I've found so far indicates that once you introduce color into a white egg-layer it is much harder to breed that color back out than it is for the breeding of other traits. It's all very complicated, very fascinating and I will ramble on about it if allowed to LOL Google "Punnett square" to see how I arrived at the percentages I did... but realize that it's based off of only 1 gene controlling egg color (o,o for white and B,B for brown.) When in reality there are an unknown (but definitely multiple) numbers of genes controlling egg color, size, shape, spots, dots, speckles, tints, thickness, hardness etc. etc. etc.!!!!
Thank you for your reply. I just thought I had read that the father of the chick would control what color egg the female offspring would lay.
The real genetics behind the color of chicken eggs has not been fully mapped out yet and there are lots of complications to the whole thing. But basically what I've found so far indicates that once you introduce color into a white egg-layer it is much harder to breed that color back out than it is for the breeding of other traits. It's all very complicated, very fascinating and I will ramble on about it if allowed to LOL Google "Punnett square" to see how I arrived at the percentages I did... but realize that it's based off of only 1 gene controlling egg color (o,o for white and B,B for brown.) When in reality there are an unknown (but definitely multiple) numbers of genes controlling egg color, size, shape, spots, dots, speckles, tints, thickness, hardness etc. etc. etc.!!!!
Thank you for your reply. I just thought I had read that the father of the chick would control what color egg the female offspring would lay.