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Are you sure he is a barred rock and sussex cross? He should be black with barring? The only way he could be a barred rock and sussex cross would be if the barred rock was a hybrid or heterozygous at the E locus.
I think the problem with giving hybrids names is that some people will use it to sell chickens that do not breed true. I have seen the same thing for varieties of certain breeds that are not true breeders. If the naming thing gets popular, then individuals will start selling hamlegs and rhodelegs etc. as if they are a new breed when they are actually a hybrid. Not everyone knows about the APA Standards and I can see someone advertising a rare new breed that only they sell and getting a lot of money for a hybrid. What a rip off!
If a person can produce a new breed with different characteristics more power to them but it must breed true in type and variety and consistently express the genotype of the breed.
Tim
Yep. His dad was a Light Sussex and his mom is a Barred Rock. I have no hybrid chickens, mutts, but no hybrids. I would love to see a duck-chicken hybrid though! The barred rock hens, I got them from a rancher who breeds chickens for laying and meat. He does have show quality birds, I did get a couple of cochins from him that grew out beautifully. I don't think he breeds them specifically for show, but he does have them. He keeps all the birds seperate too, cochins, SLWs, barred rocks, NHRs, easter eggers, all kept seperate. The Light Sussex roo came from a local person who bought him and his brothers as youngins at a bird show.
In March when a broody hatched them, there was another that came out just like him, an almost identical version of the dad (light sussex), and 2 that were black with barring. Unfortunately all roosters.
Hey what about a name for silkie/easter eggers? I have 2 of those!
Hybrid is a correct term for breed crosses as well as for species crosses.