Lavender araucanas are not lavender

Scott1029

Hatching
Jun 10, 2019
9
6
9
Hi,

I posted this a couple of days ago but I think I put it in the wrong place.

I hatched 4 lavender araucanas on Saturday and they have 3 different colours. Is this likely to have been a mutation, cross breeding in the parents or lavender doesn’t breed true.

My understanding is that it iscrecessive so it should have bred true.

One of the chicks also has a totally different shape?

Any clarification is much appreciated
 

Attachments

  • DEBA621F-3742-4DE3-A94D-1F3D255EFC9D.jpeg
    DEBA621F-3742-4DE3-A94D-1F3D255EFC9D.jpeg
    132.6 KB · Views: 17
  • CD87606C-569A-4051-A96A-409CD958C9B0.jpeg
    CD87606C-569A-4051-A96A-409CD958C9B0.jpeg
    218.9 KB · Views: 14
  • C89BEB0D-1750-4445-AC76-9CC6E3E79199.jpeg
    C89BEB0D-1750-4445-AC76-9CC6E3E79199.jpeg
    211.4 KB · Views: 13
  • 79762EF7-3A45-491B-AD15-4B6D458B4CE9.jpeg
    79762EF7-3A45-491B-AD15-4B6D458B4CE9.jpeg
    159.1 KB · Views: 14
  • EE09DC35-0F78-4817-8FF1-807F57D2A48E.jpeg
    EE09DC35-0F78-4817-8FF1-807F57D2A48E.jpeg
    187.4 KB · Views: 15
I think they should be lavender; perhaps yours have something else in the mix?These are 2 day old pure lav araucanas, British spec
P1070402.JPG
 
I think the pattern in the chicks is just showing variation.
However recessive white can show up even in lavender Araucanas, and wouldn't be surprising to discover, since recessive white is actually fairly common in that breed.
 
As to your question. I would say it's not a mutation. Although they can happen its very rare that they do and for a few to have different mutations from the same hatch would be unheard of odds.
Yes if they're straight lavender they would always breed true.
Are they cross breeds I doubt it. Lavender can be in combo with other patterns as well as just solid lavender.
That's what I suspect is going on. Instead of the parents being pure for extended black with lavender that they're pattern crossed birds and the different pattern genes are what's causing the different looks.
 
I too would suspect that because lavender and blue genes both dilute black that perhaps the parent stock has been mixed resulting in chicks expressing lavender and blue genes as it looks like you may have a splash or blue chick. That being said, I'm not even sure if the birds could express those genes without pulling out a pen and paper. But I'd certainly expect the parents to not be black under the lavender which accounts for the discrepancies with the chicks.
 
Thanks for all the replies.

They are British araucanas and it does look exactly like you’re suggesting.

Do you know if any of the colour variations happen to be sex linked?

I’ve attached photos of them now (7 days old)
 

Attachments

  • 06A2C44B-C976-4BD0-AD06-00008539F55F.jpeg
    06A2C44B-C976-4BD0-AD06-00008539F55F.jpeg
    267.1 KB · Views: 7
  • F72ECA0D-585D-46AE-9739-7E1ED212F0F7.jpeg
    F72ECA0D-585D-46AE-9739-7E1ED212F0F7.jpeg
    252.8 KB · Views: 7
  • 3CBFE71B-C580-4F6B-8EEC-FF61C3A62B39.jpeg
    3CBFE71B-C580-4F6B-8EEC-FF61C3A62B39.jpeg
    350.7 KB · Views: 7

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom