Sorry, Nicalandia, but I have to say that is the ugliest rooster I have ever seen!

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So you would be crossing him to the wildtype hen to see if her feathers are diluted?
Also, is wildtype a sex linked thing? I hatched a serama chick whose feathers are coming in wildtype, so I'm wondering if this is an indication that she's a she?
I see past Phenotypes.. I carry my Genetic decoder goggles all the time...Sorry, Nicalandia, but I have to say that is the ugliest rooster I have ever seen!![]()
And I admire you for that!I see past Phenotypes.. I carry my Genetic decoder goggles all the time...![]()
I was born a Scientist, I love numbers, genetics, chemicals.And I admire you for that!![]()
You have already taught me a lot-you make it fairly easy to understand, but I will never be a geneticist!![]()
Thanks.Brabanter could be cream because of combination of columbian (Co*Co) and dark brown (Db*Db) and another factor??. I have produced quite a few cream birds- I have not carried out any test crosses to determine what additional factor is causing the cream color. The cream is on birchen (E*ER) birds. Can get the same on wheaten (E*Wh) also but the birds are much lighter in color. I like the cream on the birchen allele.
I have had cream brabanter and golden brabanter in the past. It would be my opinion that the cream gene would dilute the buff to a lighter buff color. Not all buffs are the same shade so you can get some variation.
Tim
the cream gene is recessive autosomal, you need two copies of the gene on the same bird to work, so you wont see it on the first cross, you would have to cross sibling or back to cream brabanter, but why would you want the cream gene on a Buff laced phenotype? it would just Dilute the already diluted gold color even more, maybe turning it even almost silver making almost no contrast between the white lacing and the very diluted ground color..Okay sorry if I'm hijacking this thread, but I have a question about the creme gene?
Will the creme gene in the Creme Brabanter dilute the buff color as in a Buff Laced Polish?.
I'm not really trying for specific colors right now. I was just wondering if the cross would make a Creme Laced bird. After thinking about it though it would more than likely be spangled or half spangled instead of lacing.the cream gene is recessive autosomal, you need two copies of the gene on the same bird to work, so you wont see it on the first cross, you would have to cross sibling or back to cream brabanter, but why would you want the cream gene on a Buff laced phenotype? it would just Dilute the already diluted gold color even more, maybe turning it even almost silver making almost no contrast between the white lacing and the very diluted ground color..