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The "Ask Anything" to Nicalandia Thread

Do you have any photos
They are all little chunks. And they can only be this mix as the only lavender roo I have is Ameraucana and only lavender hens are Orpingtons.
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How does the autosexing of biefelders and 55 flowery hens work?

I mean; how is it that males are so much lighter? I assume it’s barring, but why would the barring lighten the whole body of males as chicks? I thought all it did was add a headspot. I know 55 flowery have mottling too, but biefelders don’t, and the males are still much lighter in the body as chicks.
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How does the autosexing of biefelders and 55 flowery hens work?

I mean; how is it that males are so much lighter? I assume it’s barring, but why would the barring lighten the whole body of males as chicks? I thought all it did was add a headspot. I know 55 flowery have mottling too, but biefelders don’t, and the males are still much lighter in the body as chicks.
Males have two copies of sex linked barring. Two copies dilutes both Pheomelanin and Eumelanin. Thats why males are usually lighter.
 
How does the autosexing of biefelders and 55 flowery hens work?

I mean; how is it that males are so much lighter? I assume it’s barring, but why would the barring lighten the whole body of males as chicks? I thought all it did was add a headspot. I know 55 flowery have mottling too, but biefelders don’t, and the males are still much lighter in the body as chicks.
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On black-based chicks, barring adds a headspot to both genders. One vs. two copies of the barring gene can change the size of the headspot (two copies = bigger spot = male), also makes a difference in how dark the legs are (two copies = lighter legs = males).

On e+ chicks (wild-type, chipmunk stripes) barring seems to put a headspot only when there are two copies (males), and it also lightens the entire body when there are two copies (males).

I don't have a good explanation for "why" it behaves this way, but it is fairly clear that it does have a dose effect (two copies makes something lighter than one copy does), and that it looks different depending on what the base color of the chick is.

I don't know what it does on wheaten, partridge, or birchen.
 
Males have two copies of sex linked barring. Two copies dilutes both Pheomelanin and Eumelanin. Thats why males are usually lighter.

On black-based chicks, barring adds a headspot to both genders. One vs. two copies of the barring gene can change the size of the headspot (two copies = bigger spot = male), also makes a difference in how dark the legs are (two copies = lighter legs = males).

On e+ chicks (wild-type, chipmunk stripes) barring seems to put a headspot only when there are two copies (males), and it also lightens the entire body when there are two copies (males).

I don't have a good explanation for "why" it behaves this way, but it is fairly clear that it does have a dose effect (two copies makes something lighter than one copy does), and that it looks different depending on what the base color of the chick is.

I don't know what it does on wheaten, partridge, or birchen.
Thank you, both of you.
 
I don't know what it does on wheaten, partridge, or birchen.
There is no Headspot on Wheaten, but males are a shade lighter than females.

On eb and ER the effect is the same, Lighter males with larger undefined Headspot that extends to the back of the head.

Wheaten based Hambars

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Golden cuckoo Maran chicks ER Barred.

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