PBAndAlice
In the Brooder
Working on a project about Frizzle chickens for a school Open House and don't wanna look like a moron in front of the whole town so I need some help.
I only have simple baseline knowledge of genetics so I don't understand the big words and I'm also getting a lot of mixed info.
This is what I think I know:
Regular feathers are dominant, and curly/frazzle feathers are also dominant, meaning that frizzle feathers are incompletely dominant and are a combination of regular and frazzle/curly.
Please correct me if the above is wrong. (Edited because I'm not sure if "heterozygous" is the proper word, since it's for dominant+recessive, and this is dominant+dominant but still 2 different alleles? I guess??)
This is what I am confused on:
If you theoretically breed two frizzles together, what would you get? Is it always going to result in frazzles/curlies, or is it 25% frazzle, 50% frizzle, and 25% regular (my understanding)? Or something entirely different?
This is what else I am confused on: Am I overthinking this too much or is it way more complicated than I think?
Again I know barely anything about genetics so please explain like I'm 5. Thank you.
I only have simple baseline knowledge of genetics so I don't understand the big words and I'm also getting a lot of mixed info.
This is what I think I know:
Regular feathers are dominant, and curly/frazzle feathers are also dominant, meaning that frizzle feathers are incompletely dominant and are a combination of regular and frazzle/curly.
Please correct me if the above is wrong. (Edited because I'm not sure if "heterozygous" is the proper word, since it's for dominant+recessive, and this is dominant+dominant but still 2 different alleles? I guess??)
This is what I am confused on:
If you theoretically breed two frizzles together, what would you get? Is it always going to result in frazzles/curlies, or is it 25% frazzle, 50% frizzle, and 25% regular (my understanding)? Or something entirely different?
This is what else I am confused on: Am I overthinking this too much or is it way more complicated than I think?
Again I know barely anything about genetics so please explain like I'm 5. Thank you.

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