Perhaps another gene is at play with Phoenixes specifically? It was my understanding as well that S/s+ and S/S look identical at hatch in cockerels with no other plumage coloration genes that differ. 

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Maybe. I'll do pictures when I get my order in from Cackle at the end of May.Perhaps another gene is at play with Phoenixes specifically? It was my understanding as well that S/s+ and S/S look identical at hatch in cockerels with no other plumage coloration genes that differ.![]()
With gold/silver sexlinks, you are sorting s+/_ females from S/s+ males.Isn't that how gold and silver sexlinks are made? My partridge silkie sexlinks are very obvious at hatch
Ahhh, okay. That's where I was getting stuck, thanksWith gold/silver sexlinks, you are sorting s+/_ females from S/s+ males.
The recent discussion is about whether S/s+ males look the same as S/S males at hatch. So a silver vs. silver-carries-gold sorting, not the usual silver vs. gold sorting.
When someone talks about "golden" males, I always have to look several times to be sure whether they really mean gold (s+/s+) or silver carrying gold (S/s+).
It has both a dark beak and light legs. I've never had a chick with that contrast before. Usually if a chick has both fibromelanotic and inhibitor of dermal melanin one of those genes will override the other. Either the chick has a light beak and legs and hides the fibromelanotic, or the fibromelanotic is stronger and hides the inhibitor.What is odd about it? Something you didn't expect from those parents?
Lavender affects pheomelanin but cream has no effect on eumelanin.Has there been any real research into the effects of lav/lav ig/ig genes? Are they epistatic? hypostatic? Or is there any anecdotal evidence? i.e. are the dilution effects cumulative? The only breed of chicken I know with both genes are the opal legbars. It's clear from looking at them that the lav gene dilutes the eumelanine to self-blue but my question is whether the two diluters have a double effect on the pheomelanine. Is it 2x the effects of one diluter or do they have different amount of dilution? The only instance of a supposed lav/lav ig/ig bird I have found is on a d'Anvers.
Now that you point it out, I agree that is odd. I'm not sure why I didn't notice it the first time I looked at the photos. I don't know what is causing it, but it is definitely interesting to see.It has both a dark beak and light legs. I've never had a chick with that contrast before. Usually if a chick has both fibromelanotic and inhibitor of dermal melanin one of those genes will override the other. Either the chick has a light beak and legs and hides the fibromelanotic, or the fibromelanotic is stronger and hides the inhibitor.