Genetics how did this happen?

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This is the same chick taken today, it looks like she has wheaton colors coming in. I have 3 other chicks hatched from my eggs with yellow down now too. I have several stagger hatches going.

Google said that wheaton is dominant over black so that explains what happened i guess.

I also looked at other breeds with wheaton feather coloring and it showed females as having a black head spot and males not. I'm hoping that means this baby is a girl. It of course is my daughters favorite chick since it stands out.
 
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This is the same chick taken today, it looks like she has wheaton colors coming in. I have 3 other chicks hatched from my eggs with yellow down now too. I have several stagger hatches going.

Google said that wheaton is dominant over black so that explains what happened i guess.

I also looked at other breeds with wheaton feather coloring and it showed females as having a black head spot and males not. I'm hoping that means this baby is a girl. It of course is my daughters favorite chick since it stands out.
Oooh that is very cool! I’ve never had Wheaton before, that does make sense if it’s dominant over black! What a cute chick 🥰
 
Okay yes, not dominant white for sure! I’d bet recessive white! I had some questionable chicks this past year that turned out to be recessive white (at the time I didn’t have any white chickens so I was confused.) It’s crazy how it can pop up!!
The chick isn't Recessive White, looks like what some of my wheatens, or wheaten Splits.
Here's Recessive White.
Screenshot_20220206-214351_Chrome.jpg
Wheaten, or Wheaten Split.
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She sure turned out beautifully!! I’m wondering if you have any insight (or anyone in general) about covering solid blue hens with a Wheaton roo (Ameraucanas) I’ve only ever worked with bbs and I’m wondering how the Wheaton “works” to put it simply 😅🙏🏻
Do you know punnet squares well? (No shame if not!) You're working with two genes there, base pattern & dilute. Base pattern determines what the bird looks like (without any added genes like barring, etc) and Dilute will, well dilute a bird! (ie make a black bird blue)

Black: EE/BB
Blue: EE/Bb
Wheaten: EwhEwh/BB
Blue Wheaten: EwhEwh/Bb

Wheaten is recessive to Solid black, so when breeding them together all of the chicks would be Solid black, carrying Wheaten (Ewh/Ewh+E/E = E/Ewh).

Obviously you know how dilute work, BB is black, Bb is blue, bb is splash. Black + Blue (BB+Bb) gives a ~50% chance of diluted, or blue chicks, the other ~50% not diluted, or black. Since your wheaten is not diluted, it'd be considered "black wheaten" in context of breeding him with blues :)
 

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