In Katie Thear's book the Manchurian Golds and Italians are refer to as being the same but your pictures show that is not so.
Is it true the Manchurians were developed in the US by Marsh Farms?
Do they both have a lethal gene?
Breed an Italian Gold male that hatched from Stellar eggs to 7 Jumbo White females and got some great color varieties including Italian females, fawns and ?fawn tuxs? (cute but have not seen or read about anything like them). They are two weeks old but thats what they look like. Not one white which just goes to show that white is recessive.
What variety do you normally breed golds to avoid the lethal gene?
Katie Thear's book is really incorrect. The Manchurians were developed by Marsh farms but are long gone. The Manchurian has little markings compared to its cousin the Italian and what is known about it currently is that it takes the homozygous form of the fawn mutation. The males have a rusty head and breast and slight stripping over a cream base. The hens are pretty much yellow with minimal stripping.
You can breed golds with browns to avoid the lethal genes a bit better.
need any pics of silvers? I have some pictures of my wild type silvers/wild type silver pieds. My silver tux are all molting right now but I can get pics of them too once they are done.
Are these the bleu's or actually silver? I was reading on that silver is really lethal and that the males look like whites. They are gorgeous nonetheless
on the uk board i was told they are silvers. it is lethal if you breed the silvers together. but silver paired with a non-silver gives you silvers and non-silvers of both genders. males do seem to be fewer. Most silvers I have hatched so far were female, this was my first silver male and the breeder I got them from also gets mainly hens.