- Mar 18, 2014
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Rose comb should be dominant over single comb. If those are the stats, I doubt you will see a single comb unless the Australorp specifically breeds with an Easter Egger who is already carrying it. That said, in nature, darker coloured animals tend to be dominant over lighter coloured animals, weighting the babies toward the Autralorp. (Single combs actually make roosters more dominant, too, which is why I prefer non-single combs. Also they can hang in the poor chickens' faces. Also they're vulnerable to frostbite.)
Now what I have heard is that the blue-egg gene is separate from the brown-egg gene. It's its own thing. So you can have a chicken who is homozygous for both. (As has been said, lovely olive eggs there.) So if you've got Easter Eggers who carry two copies because the hatchery bred them as Easter Eggers, with other Easter Eggers, all their babies should get one copy, and have the potential to produce lovely Easter eggs. All the fathers seem to be brownies, so you'll get chickens who all lay eggs in various shades of green. Probably no blue.
Now what I have heard is that the blue-egg gene is separate from the brown-egg gene. It's its own thing. So you can have a chicken who is homozygous for both. (As has been said, lovely olive eggs there.) So if you've got Easter Eggers who carry two copies because the hatchery bred them as Easter Eggers, with other Easter Eggers, all their babies should get one copy, and have the potential to produce lovely Easter eggs. All the fathers seem to be brownies, so you'll get chickens who all lay eggs in various shades of green. Probably no blue.