Egg coloring from different roosters?

mochicken

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I have 4 hens that are with 2 roos ( I know I need to get rid of a roo lol, in the process of finding him a new home )

The hens are BSL and the roos are "Easter Eggers", do the roosters being a different breed affect the color of the eggs from BSL hens? they are light brown- tan eggs but they have not been laying long. Just curious if the color of the egg is affected by they roosters at all since they are a different breed?
 
Since EE's are themselves crosses, it's hard to know what they are contributing. They could contribute the blue egg gene, assuming they have pea combs. But they contribute brown as well or a mixture of the two. The only way to find out is to test mate them.
 
I wonder that also. I have an Ameraucana pullet and the roo that we will be keeping is a Black Copper mix. Would that mean that I won't get blue/green eggs, but instead a brown?
 
Right. If you are talking about what color or shade of eggs the offspring will lay, the rooster will contribute some genes. Especially with EE roosters yoou don't know what you will get.

If you are talking about the egg color the mated hen lays, the rooster has absolutely no effect on what color eggs she lays. Her egg color will be the same whether she mates or not.
 
Quote:
If she is a true Ameraucana and pure for blue eggs and she lays blue eggs now, you will probably get green eggs. If she is an EE and is not pure for blue (even if she lays blue eggs now), or if she lays green eggs now, you may or may not get green eggs.

The basic egg shell color is either blue or white. When you crack an egg and look under the membrane inside, you will see the basic color. You might get different shades of white. I have one that lays what I would call ivory, but that is due to other things. If the hen has either one or two blue genes, the basic egg shell will be blue. Blue is dominant over white.

Whether the egg is white, blue, brown, or green when viewed from the outside of the shell depends on different genes. Chickens may coat the egg with various shades of brown, which gives a lot of different color or shades. Think of it this way:

Basic white + no brown gives a white egg
Basic white + light brown gives a light brown egg
Basic white + dark brown gives a dark brown egg

Basic blue + no brown gives a blue egg
Basic blue + light brown gives a light green egg
Basic blue + dark brown gives an olive green egg
 
Yeah RR I was talking about the mated hen laying eggs colored by the rooster. I have BSL pullets and EE Roosters and they are breeding obviously so I wondered if that made a difference at all, I have been getting tan/brown eggs so I figured the correct answer was no but this eggin stuff is all new to me lol

Thanks everyone for your replies, I have alot to learn but I have learned so much already from you all.
 

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