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There has to be a restricter in the bird to restrict the black to the posterior part of the bird. If the birds were eb with a restricter, then they would be barred buff columbian.
What is the color of the male- are the males silver in the hackles? It could be that the birds are gold and the cream gene plus the barring gene is diluting the hackles to a silver color. But you would not get the same thing happening in the wings and tail. The wings and tails of the males have very little black and a bunch of silver.
The males that I have seen only have the red color across the back. This is typical of autosomal red on a silver bird. The tails and wings of the males have much of the black removed- this is typical of the dark brown gene on birds that are not birchen or not extended black.
The problem is with the restrictor- it may be that the birds contain a restrictor that is not documented. The columbian gene will make the eb birds a columbian phenotype and the Jaerhon are not columbian.
The dark brown gene is a restrictor but tends to remove most of the black from a bird that is eb or birchen so you get a black tailed white or black tailed red phenotype.
Dark brown on extended black produces a female bird that has posterior restriction like Jaerhon.
There is a definite difference in how the male reacts to the genotype than the female.
Will add more later
Tim
This is very helpful. I have just read Brian Reeder's An Introduction to Color Forms of the Domestic Fowl: A Look at Color Varieties and How They Are Made and it is helpful, but the lack of pictures has made it difficult to visualize what he is saying and apply it to this situation. I will try to get you more pictures of the Jaer roosters, hens, and chicks.
Kathleen