In the 2012 year I bred a Bronze male that had no white but did produce WY offspring to a Blue female split to Bronze and Silver pied, All I got were some Bronze females and some splits to Bronze. Last year this same breeding produces a few Bronze hens and 2 males ,one started out with some WY indications and at 8-9 months is all Bronze.. The other one has a lot of white and getting more a lot more,, I have discussed this with some other breeders and the thoughts is that this bird is like what is being called a progressive pied, but the pied is not coming in like a normal pied does. He is, as I stated less than 1 yr old. Some where I have the reported background of the Bronze and there is a cross of green into them and I think that is what give it the green sheen in the neck. connerhills
OK, I'll bite. What, genetically, is a "Blue female split to Bronze and Silver Pied"? If Silver Pied requires one copy of White, and one copy of Pied, along with the White Eye mutation, AND the hypothetical "dusting" gene, and you say your hen that is "split" to all of that, what is she? She can't have a copy of White and a copy of Pied and not BE Pied, so she has one or the other. If two of the ingredients to put together the Silver Pied phenotype are alleles, she can't be split to both and ALSO have a "normal" version of the gene -- unless she's
triploid.
Let's just assume she had one Silver Pied parent, and one Bronze parent -- which, if you want to use "Silver Pied" as though it was one gene, would result in a bird being "split to Silver Pied". Genetically, however, she'd be either:
1) IB single factor White Eye split to Bronze and White
or
2) IB single factor White Eye split to Bronze and Pied
Let's focus on the Pied/White part. Being as both Pied and White are necessary ingredients to make the Silver Pied phenotype, a bird technically can't be "split to Silver Pied" because that implies having one copy of each ingredient, balanced with the normal version of each. If she has one copy of White and one copy of Pied, she wouldn't be IB split to White, or IB split to Pied, or IB split to White and Pied. She'd be IB Pied. And with two different versions of the same gene, there's no third "space" left for the normal version to occupy -- again, unless you have a hen with three sets of each chromosome, i.e. a triploid bird.
This is why using phenotype names in genetic equations leads to confusion -- and why the same "what do I get if I cross...?" questions keep coming up on here. You might very well know what you mean when you say something like "split to Oaten" but the term itself is not clear.
