Ok so you talked about green and black ones..would she be a black..even though when sun hits her feathers she has a lot of color..and why didn't I see any my first year from eggs I hatched. Just this year..if bred back with my ringneck male any idea what she would produce..
This is my male
Ok so you talked about green and black ones..would she be a black..even though when sun hits her feathers she has a lot of color..and why didn't I see any my first year from eggs I hatched. Just this year..if bred back with my ringneck male any idea what she would produce..
This is my male
Your male definitely has the melanistic gene. The original melanistic gene came from a normal looking ringnecked bird, as a mutation. Without doing DNA testing, it would be nearly impossibe to know what various species of "true pheasants" is present in it's lineage, unless you did the cross breeding of the birds yourself.
My mutts, came from pure green melanistic parent birds...or so I thought! but I got both green and the mutts.
The Green melanistic will be totally green, everywhere and no white ring around it's neck...the Black melanistic will be black everywhere, even the hens. They will have an iridescent purple to the feathers when the sun hits it just right. And like the green, no white ring, either. A green hen looks just like yours look. They may have an iridescent purple or green on the back of the neck (nape). The male green melanistic's feathers will change different shades of green, depending on the light/angle that hits its feathers. My male Green has a dark brown iris as well, not yellow. The Black male also has a dark brown iris.
With all the cross breeding, inbreeding, line breeding that's been done on the common ringnecked pheasant, there's no way of knowing what genes are present in any given bird. Another point of note; Both my green and black hens lay an unusally high percentage of "soft eggs", I think, my opinion is that they are too inbred? None of my other birds I raise/breed lay soft eggs. They are also like chickens in that they lay nearly year round?, the only time they don't is during molt. Infact, mine just finished molting and are laying again.
As far as what you'll get if you breed your male back to the hens, is anybodys guess!