@dheltzel I would love your opinion on the cream legbar Sexlinked Silver vs Gold debate. I have always held the belief of gold myself but recently have doubts.
Starting with Males - A double silver gene will remove the red from the bird. Even at the Bow and shoulders where is it most prominent.
The female on the other hand holds its prominent red in her breast which is mostly unaffected.
If we assume e+ and autosomal red are potentially one in the same (I know that is a big assumption but hold with me) does that make the only difference between the male and female being DF Double Factor Silver?
Due to the double factor the female retains the breast and the male does not retain his wing. (I assume some threshold of pheomelanin levels is involved as well, considering a male has more across his body and the female has it all in a concentrated area)
The threshold, and all of the trouble CL lines have with red enhancers, Melanizers and crele vs cream debates made me consider that silver with red enhancers may be the better choice for breeders who desire to not have to split breed proper males and females.
A silver male, with Mahogony and the cream gene will show cream coloration.
Now for the barring- the barring will likely make this hint of cream color appear silver since it is already so light. However, the brassy duckwing bow/shoulder would remain present like we see on birds currently. The mahogany also would have a Colombian affect to the back, pushing the black away. Assumingely to the hackles and saddle. This is where the black in the barring pattern that is most often missing is lost since it requires Mh. This could also help some of the stray white feathers in the tail.(or could be the cause of them)
Something that stood out to me was your comment of cream turning the female grey from your experience. But the silver gene also does this and makes way for cream with Mh involved.
The for the female, the Mh will add some tint to the hackles however not much at all, but will add a small amount of black. It would also enhance red/brown stippling as is called for and prevent the breast from turning orange.
It seems like this take would make pure breeding the line more realistic but fit the genotype/phenotype that already exists.
I feel like punnets comment of silver and cream being indistinguishable is relevant here, but retaining the red duckwing, the shift in back color, and the stippling in the females could be the small differences noted in the two other than of course the added crest.
I’d love to know your thoughts!