I'm embarking on a project (started, actually) to try and cull my way into a backyard mutt with some desired traits. My Roo is of unknown genetics, and some of my starter hens are hybrids, so... I know I'm rolling a lot of dice.
All of my eggs currently run shades of cream to brown, and I'm hoping to eventually end up with something consistently closer to cream than brown. In the first two batches of offspring, some of my babies appear to have slate legs, are generally darker overall, and pronounced black markings on the beak.
Query One) Is this indicative of the E gene?
Query Two) While the effect on beak and leg color is obvious, is it ALSO associated with darker tinted eggs? (I'm not looking for blue/green here, just wondering if the gene has any impact at all on the darkness of shell tinting?)
Query Three) Are there other genes, particularly red genes, that have impact on shell tinting (darker/lighter)?
Thanks in advance. I've read a bunch of pages that focus on the primary effect of various genes, but not so much about how they might affect other characteristics of the birds, or combine with other genes to have secondary effects.
All of my eggs currently run shades of cream to brown, and I'm hoping to eventually end up with something consistently closer to cream than brown. In the first two batches of offspring, some of my babies appear to have slate legs, are generally darker overall, and pronounced black markings on the beak.
Query One) Is this indicative of the E gene?
Query Two) While the effect on beak and leg color is obvious, is it ALSO associated with darker tinted eggs? (I'm not looking for blue/green here, just wondering if the gene has any impact at all on the darkness of shell tinting?)
Query Three) Are there other genes, particularly red genes, that have impact on shell tinting (darker/lighter)?
Thanks in advance. I've read a bunch of pages that focus on the primary effect of various genes, but not so much about how they might affect other characteristics of the birds, or combine with other genes to have secondary effects.