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Songster
- Jan 29, 2020
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Please Can somebody tell me if beards and puffs on EEs are from a dominant gene or a recessive gene. I have many types of chickens on the ranch and sell eggs and chickens to locals but have become most interested in Ameraucanas but for now have EEs. I have hatched many eggs of other varieties with brooding hen and incubator but have noticed interesting but confusing results with EEs. EE hens crossed with any other breed I have yields beautiful hens and roosters all with puffs and beards even more handsome than parents. Ordered a year ago 3 EE roosters from hatchery called Ameraucanas of course and 2 were a normal color for that rooster and bearded but one was white with black tails and streaked neck feathers but no beard. Used him on my 10 hens all same brown w/black markings and most have Ps and Bs. Set eggs under brood buff Orpington hen and hatched 7. Lucky me 5 hens, 3 being brown/black blend but no Bs and no Ps. 2 more pullets were what I actually was looking for a match to rooster with white and black markings almost yielding a grey look at distance , both w/complete beautiful Bs and Ps.. Same colored sibling rooster smaller pea comb than dad and no Ps and Bs like dad. Other rooster normal browns and blacks and golden neck and beautiful P and B. Of 5 hens 4 lay beautiful robin blue eggs and 1 lays white. Do not know who white egg layer is yet. Originally I thought beards and puffs held fatal gene but now have read it’s Araucana rumpless gene. Correct??? But why do some EEs have beards and puffs and some not and how can they be assured to be passed on. Example summarized, my EE white/black rooster beardless and no puffs on top EE brown hens w/B&P resulted in brown pullets no B&P same color as mothers and white/black hens matching dad actually do have Most beautiful B&Ps.