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Okay, now I'm confused again. If they are homozygous for the blue egg gene, then they won't be olive eggers, right?
Olive eggs are the result of blue eggs and dark brown eggs, all expressed at the same time.
People refer to the "blue" egg gene because without the interference of any other genes, the eggs are indeed blue. But blue eggs in the presence of brown egg genes gives you the appearance of green eggs, and blue when combined with the dark brown coatings of Marans and Welsummers, gives the appearance of olive eggs.
There is no green egg gene, or olive egg gene, just combinations of the blue egg gene with various brown egg genes.
Okay so really what you need to make an olive egger is a bird homozygous for blue egg genes + dark brown shellack from marans or welsummers. You really don't need the brown egg gene at all...
Okay, now I'm confused again. If they are homozygous for the blue egg gene, then they won't be olive eggers, right?
Olive eggs are the result of blue eggs and dark brown eggs, all expressed at the same time.
People refer to the "blue" egg gene because without the interference of any other genes, the eggs are indeed blue. But blue eggs in the presence of brown egg genes gives you the appearance of green eggs, and blue when combined with the dark brown coatings of Marans and Welsummers, gives the appearance of olive eggs.
There is no green egg gene, or olive egg gene, just combinations of the blue egg gene with various brown egg genes.
Okay so really what you need to make an olive egger is a bird homozygous for blue egg genes + dark brown shellack from marans or welsummers. You really don't need the brown egg gene at all...