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Got my first ever recessive white this morning- I was beginning to think I didn't have it. I think it's a girl. I've hatched about a dozen cream legbar eggs almost every week so far this year and hadn't come across it until now. Has anyone done any test breeding with the white gene? It is possible only one of my hens carry the white gene and I can find her by elimination, or do you think my rooster has it, too? They are lovely birds of their own, but I'd rather not have the white gene in my flock. Not really sure yet what I'm going to do.
Sounds like a question for a math and genetics test:
Given X number of hens, Y number of roosters, Z number of hatched chicks, and W being the number of chicks that are white, calculate the likelihood of the probable number of hens with that gene, the probability of the rooster being the carrier, the percentage of chicks that carry one white gene, and precisely why one stubborn 34-week-old pullet (not in the above flock) has not yet laid an egg.
That last bit about the pullet is for extra credit.
I like cat food better myselfLOL!!!! You know why that tickles me so much? My bachelors degree is in mathematics!!! Love it!![]()
My husband said he heard from a friend who swears by this method: for a chicken that ought to be laying, feed a high protein dog food exclusively for 5 days. Sometimes kicks them into gear!
RE: recessive white gene being carried by the rooster as well- I know that's exactly what I was afraid of. But I have some good friends who love their chickens and have layers only, I will probably pass this chick and any other white females on to her and cull the males.
BUT as this is the very first one I have come across in about 150-200 chicks, I am hoping that means only one of my hens has the recessive white gene and probably my rooster. Not sure if it's worth the work to weed it out just won't be creating a white flock for myself.
Yes i have 6 laying hens. With not seeing it until now I'm guessing only one or two have the recessive gene.
Not interested in culling my male. He is the best I have ever had and one of the best I have seen in the US. Will just deal with the recessives that hatch out I guess.
WW- no recessive white, look regularOkay, so if we assume the roo has one recessive white gene, and of six hens, let's say (for argument's sake) that two of them have it. You hatched out how many babies? And one was white. So the white gene isn't passed on every single time, right? Or there would be (doing the math in my head) um, lots more of them.
Sounds like not a significant problem, though it's all still theoretical to me. Is this reasoning correct?