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thanks MCThe color pattern just looks Par
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thanks MCThe color pattern just looks Par
Here's some silver pencilling.
You're welcome.thanks MC
Yeah.I like the penciling. Not fussy about it, but it does look better than partial messy peciling & lacing.
Here are some photo's of my recent project birds - all of which have varying degrees of "partial" pencilling and lacing - due to missing one or two genes necessary to make the complete pencilling and/or lacing.I like the penciling. Not fussy about it, but it does look better than partial messy peciling & lacing.
http://www.edelras.nl/chickengenetics/mutations1.html
Elderas is really helpful for poultry genetics.
Okay, first of all, anything red is gold based... except, a chicken can express red and still be silver based. For example, salmon is actually silver wheaten with the mahogany (red) gene.
A silver duckwing with the mahogany gene appears to be cream with a red shoulder, but you can really only see this in the males.
View attachment 2112244
Second of all, blacks are always gold or silver. Some are gold based, some are silver based. It depends upon the breed. Most are gold based because it is more common. Some blue breeders, will be silver. Sometimes they will get gold or silver leakage, and you will be able to tell.
Okay, pencilling, partridge, lacing... you really touched the quick there. Allow me to clumsily explain the most miscommunicated part of the poultry genetics world as best I can...
Pencilled- partridge gene+lacing= pencilling. Sometimes it is called partridge, sometimes called pencilling. Often used with the silver equivalent
View attachment 2112262
(Silver pencilled rock-partridge+pattern gene+silver)
There is also something called transverse pencilling which is a totally different pattern made up of different genes. It is also known as autosomal barring, which is somewhat less confusing, but still a misnomer for people who will confuse it with sex-linked barring.
View attachment 2112268
(Transverse pencilling- birchen, ginger, pattern gene)
Partridge- this one is confusing... It is a gene on the e locus, controlling the black extension. Basically it removes the red from the breast of the hen.
View attachment 2112258 (Dark brown Leghorns are a prime example of this, but they have the mahogany gene.)
However, it is also the name for a color, which is partridge based with a pattern gene. Partridge is almost always seen with a pattern gene, which shows double lacing. In America, partridge birds also have the mahogany gene.
View attachment 2112259
(Partridge pattern with pattern gene, no mahogany, from Britain)
View attachment 2112261(Partridge with pattern gene and mahogany, from America.)
To complicate things further, many people in other countries call the duckwing pattern partridge, which can be confusing.
Lacing- lacing basically means any edging on the feather that contrasts with the regular color.
View attachment 2112269
(the edging on the feather of this blue would be considered “lacing,” though it’s not really a laced pattern)
There are two laced patterns made of multiple different genes.
View attachment 2112272
(Gold laced- birchen, columbian, ginger, melanized, pattern gene)
View attachment 2112278
(Gold laced (black tail)- partridge, columbian, melanized, pattern gene. Wyandottes are different from Sebrights and Polish, the pattern doesn’t go through their tails.)
Double lacing is another pattern made of multiple genes.
View attachment 2112289
(Double laced- partridge, melanized, pattern gene. I can’t recall whether Barnevelders also have the mahogany gene.)
There is also Andalusian lacing
View attachment 2112292
(Andalusian blue- birchen, melanized, pattern gene)
DISCLAIMER: none of these are my pictures.
He would probably have a coloring something like this-Thank you so much Kooky! I've saved the lace pic and the copy paste you put here. Very helpful.
Do you know what the easter egger rooster version of "Partridge pattern with pattern gene, no mahogany" looks like?
View attachment 2593587
& well, I'm not trying for anything just yet. I'm hoping to move within a year. I can't have chickens where I am now. Hopefully I'll be able to move where I can have a rooster or 2. Some of the towns near me don't allow roosters. We'll see. But I'm very glad to have all this information in case I can.