GlicksChicks
Crowing
Is it possible for it to ever successfully split in two?Rare siamese twins. Would've been identical twins if the embryo split successfully into two.
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Is it possible for it to ever successfully split in two?Rare siamese twins. Would've been identical twins if the embryo split successfully into two.
Yes, but rare. Chicks most likely will die in shell due to limited space.Is it possible for it to ever successfully split in two?
I would think so, the egg sometimes isn't even big enough for one chick.Yes, but rare. Chicks most likely will die in shell due to limited space.
YES! Someone who actually knows about eye genetics!I have a duck with dichromatic eyes. A lighter brown, with some blueish grey specs. Half Mallard and half Call, her sire is blue eyed, and the right eye has some brown in it. The mother and sibling have typical brown eyes.
I know alittle, but with chickens.YES! Someone who actually knows about eye genetics!
I know about it because I did a study on pygment and melanin in humans and a lot of it coralates to animals aswellI know alittle, but with chickens.
Chicken eye color genetics are actually less understood. Very few studies are actually available.I know about it because I did a study on pygment and melanin in humans and a lot of it coralates to animals aswell
I know pearl eyes are caused by a recessive gene.Pearl eyes are caused by a recessive gene.
Brown eyes is theorized to be gene but I can’t remember if it is dominant or recessive. There is some discourse here. It proved my theory wrong, and showed that brown eyes are more complicated then we can imagine.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/threads/theory-ml-and-id-cause-brown-eyes-in-chickens.1590476/
Dichromatic eyes don’t really exist in chickens (unless you count both brown and red eyes, but this is caused by melanizers. In turkeys and ducks, (geese too I think) birds can have both brown and blue eyes. This is caused by white spotting or recessive white, very similar to the blue eyes causes in cats.
However, in turkeys blue eyes sometimes occur in birds without any white spotting, and nobody knows the nature of the genetics causing them.