Question about comb genetics

Miss717

Songster
10 Years
May 5, 2011
294
164
221
Rushville, NE
I have a buff Orpington rooster and some golden laced Wyandotte hens. It seems like any chicks I have gotten from this combination have had rose combs. Right now I have a chick that I am pretty sure is a Wyandotte/Orpington cross and it has a single comb. Does this mean that one of my Wyandotte hens is not pure Wyandotte? They are hatchery birds. Thank you for any information you can give.
 
Generally rose comb is dominant over a single comb. Some Wyandotte can be single combed which means some Wyandotte carry the genes for a single comb, so if the right bird is bred it could result in a single comb in the offspring.
 
Yes, Rose comb is dominant. But, if you have a Wyandotte who has a recessive for straight comb, you would see a rose comb, but she can still pass on a straight comb to some of her offspring. When crossed with the BO, half of her chicks (statistically) would be straight combed.
 
Single comb alleles persist in Wyandottes because homozygous (R/R) rose comb roosters have decreased fertility/sperm motility, which means the sperm of heterozygous rose/single (R/r) roosters outcompete those of pure rose combed birds in a mixed flock. Single comb is recessive to rose, but as every bird has two copies, and heterozygous roosters have a marked advantage, the single comb allele persists in rose combed flocks.

So long as you're sure the chick is a Wyandotte/Orpington cross, your hen must be heterozygous for rose comb (R/r).
 

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