Unexpected chick colors

AinaWGSD

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I will preface this by saying I haven't yet separated my flock into breeding pens, so I don't actually know the parentage of the confusing chicks.

I have 4 roosters, 2 buckeyes (black tailed red) and 2 malines black barred). Hens are mostly buckeyes, 4 malines, and 1 solid blue easter egger. Most of the chicks I hatched are black barred, they could be either malines or malines/buckeye crosses.

I expected any pure buckeyes to hatch out red.
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These are the buckeyes hatched last year, the parents of the buckeye chicks i hatched this weekend. This is what I expected any buckeye chicks to look like.
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The 8 non-black chicks all hatched far more yellow and striped than I expected. I'd appreciate any help figuring out what this means.

From what I understand, buckeyes are wheaten based with Columbian and mahogany plus another gene that darkens the red. Do these light colored chicks mean one of these genes is missing (hen or rooster or both heterozygous instead of homozygous)?
 
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I will preface this by saying I haven't yet separated my flock into breeding pens, so I don't actually know the parentage of the confusing chicks.

I have 4 roosters, 2 buckeyes (black tailed red) and 2 malines black barred). Hens are mostly buckeyes, 4 malines, and 1 solid blue easter egger. Most of the chicks I hatched are black barred, they could be either malines or malines/buckeye crosses.
Could any of the chicks have come from the Easter Egger?
If she lays blue or green eggs, and the others all lay shades of brown, you probably know whether you set any of hers.

From what I understand, buckeyes are wheaten based with Columbian and mahogany plus another gene that darkens the red. Do these light colored chicks mean one of these genes is missing (hen or rooster or both heterozygous instead of homozygous)?
Likely yes, one or another of those genes missing.

Or else you've got one or more Malines that are missing a gene for Extended Black, in which case the confusing chicks could be pure "Malines" or Malines/Buckeye crosses.

Looking at your puzzling chicks, I'm wondering if some of them have the Silver gene instead of gold. Buckeyes have the gold gene, but many black barred chicks do have the silver gene, so an off-color Malines or a Malines/Buckeye cross might show silver.

If Malines have single combs and Buckeyes have pea combs, then you may be able to sort out all the parentage as the chicks grow. Pure Malines and pure Buckeyes would have the correct comb types for their breed, and mixed chicks would have heterozygous pea combs (usually a bit larger and blobbier than a pure pea comb, but not as skinny and tall and spiky as a single comb.)
 
Thanks for your thoughts @NatJ I had briefly considered if there might be a way these chicks could be malines crosses. I had assumed they were all homozygous for extended black.

I am confident my Easter egger's eggs could not be confused for either of the other breeds, they're a distinct green.

I agree, the combs may be my best clue. Right now they're too little to see clearly yet.
 
I am confident my Easter egger's eggs could not be confused for either of the other breeds, they're a distinct green.
I did not expect you to mix them up. I just wondered whether you put any of them in the incubator :)

Thanks for your thoughts @NatJ I had briefly considered if there might be a way these chicks could be malines crosses. I had assumed they were all homozygous for extended black.
I would assume the Malines to be homozygous for Extended Black-- but since something weird is going on, I figured me might at least consider that alternative too.

I agree, the combs may be my best clue. Right now they're too little to see clearly yet.
I'd love to see updates as they grow!
 

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