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Veins are starting to recede and she's rotated back a tiny bit...presumably to zip. Hoping.
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It could be from bacteria, or just bad luck, or a combination of factors. Having one die early on, one with trouble at hatching, and one that died after it had hatched makes me suspect that there are three different causes, and it's just coincidence that these eggs all came from the same hen.I still think bacteria got in when the eggs got yolk on them but I have to wonder since all 3 from the one hen passed. What are the odds? I've never had eggs that developed and then died. I know it happens; I've just never experienced it (excluding the time I threw eggs in my bra...that's another story for another day). And all from the same bird? Could some sort of lethal gene be present?
I think he is probably not the father, given the timing, but it's not impossible!He passed weeks before we left for vaca but looking at this chick, it dawned on me that he might have been just as sneaky as his half brother Sneaky B!
This one had the Brahma mother, right?who's the likelier dad? Lokee, the dark LF Ameraucana/silkieX roo or Logan, the dark bantam roo that passed?
i'm curious to see, but I'm not sure they would help much (at least yet) in figuring this out.Of note, I don't know the background of the bantam roos' parents but I have an idea. And I believe their dad did have a satin/silkie mutt hen in his background. I could post pics of parents and suspected grandparents but it would probably get too confusing.
Me again! So regarding the 3 chicks from the brahma and the melanistic roo, you were right! One chick is dark skinned and splash and a pullet. The other 2...light skinned and cockerels. So now I have another question...I have a bantam hen out of the deceased EE/silkie cross. She's got black skin and black plumage with a gold neck. Sneaky calico bantam is the father of a clutch of eggs she hid and sat on. We discovered it when they were already 2 weeks into development. 8 chicks hatched but one passed....it appears she crushed it while nesting. All 8 chicks have light skin even though mom has black. Do the same genetic rules apply to chicks with a melanistic mom (and light skinned dad) that you described for ones with a melanistic dad (and light skinned mom)? They're all feathering out fast and more consistent with pullets. Based on the outcome with the brahma's chicks, I'd expect the reverse with this clutch...all males being dark skinned and all females light skinned. But I find it hard to believe I got 8 pullets! I'm thinking the rules might only apply when dad is melanistic and mom is light. Need your wisdom!In those cases, if the father was Ayam Cemani (two copies of fibro, two copies of id+ that allows fibro to show), then he would give each chick one copy of fibro, and one copy of id+
Each chick would get one copy of not-fibro from the mother, which is recessive and doesn't matter here.
Daughters would have id+ on the Z chromosome from their father, and a W chromosome from their mother, so of course the fibro could show on them.
But sons should not show fibro unless they got id+ from their mother as well as their father.
If the mother was any breed with slate or willow shanks, she would also be id+ and could give it to her son. Hamburgs, Ameraucanas, and some other breeds have slate or willow legs (id+), as do many Easter Eggers. So a cross of Ayam Cemani with any of those "light" breeds (no fibro) would still allow fibro to show in both genders of offspring.