I have a Mille fleur roo and what appears to be a silver spangled chick.
My mille fleur rooster, as I’ve been reading, may not actually even be mille fleur because he only has white tipped feathers on his head and in his down feathers. His father was a porcelain sablepoot (the mille fleur patterning was in the porcelain) and his mother was a white silkie/OEGB mix.
Mottling is caused by a recessive gene.He may just be a carrier for mottling correct?
So the Porcelain Sablepoot would have the mottling gene, and his son (your rooster) would have one copy of the gene.
Yes, that makes him a carrier for mottling.
I do not think he has the particular set of genes that make "spangling" (the kind found in Silver Spangled Hamburgs.)And have spangling?
But some kinds of "spangled" chickens are caused by the mottling gene (Spangled Old English Game Bantam, Spangled Cornish, Spangled Russian Orloff.)
(Obviously, whoever was naming those chicken colors did not know which ones were caused by what genes!)
It can be difficult to look at a chick and predict the adult color, and with a mixed-breed chick it is even harder.The chick looks like this:
View attachment 2833083
I’m just guessing silver spangled because I googled it and some of the chicks look like this one and I know it’s from that rooster because of other traits it has (4 toes, etc)
I'm fairly sure your chick will have some kind of pattern in silver and black, but I don't think it will have the kind of spangling that Silver Spangled Hamburgs have. (That's based on what you've said of its ancestors, and what genes they are likely to have.)
You should be able to tell something of the appearance when it gets its first set of feathers, but sometimes the pattern continues to change as a chick grows and molts, so it may not really show the adult pattern until it is an adult.
I'd love to see updated photos as it grows up
