It looks like this has already been answered pretty well, but if you want the basic idea in my words too:So glad to see you're back, @nicalandia
Is this true?
An expert in a FB group said that to get Fibro from mixed breeding, the other parent has to have slate shanks.
As a sex-linked recessive, would all the sons of a fibro hen crossed with a white shanked rooster be carrying 1 copy of Fibro?
Or just some of them?
Am I better off crossing the fibro hen with a slate shanked rooster?
* for blue ears breeding, not super black skin.
@NatJ I would appreciate your input as well, if your computer is cooperating?![]()
--Fibro cannot show unless the bird has the gene for dark skin (dark skin gives slate/willow shanks if the bird does not have fibro)
--Fibro itself is dominant, so crossing a fibro bird with a slate-shanked bird or a willow-shanked bird should give chicks that show fibro
--In mixes with light-skinned birds, you often get chicks with light legs, even though they do have the fibro gene. It just cannot express when the light skin gene is present. (Light skinned father produces light-skinned chicks of both sexes, light skinned mother produces light-skinned sons but does not affect the daughters.)
Fibromelanosis is the full form of the gene name. "Fibro" is much shorter to type, so I was lazy and used it.