Wheaten genetics

chikenkid617

In the Brooder
Joined
Feb 17, 2026
Messages
32
Reaction score
34
Points
34
Hi, I'm just curious how wheaten genetics work when crossing to duckwing. I'm hoping to make blue (gold) wheaten and silver wheaten/salmon in the main breed I work with, and I am using blue breasted red to wheaten to make the blue wheaten and silver duckwing to wheaten to make silver wheaten. I'm just curious how many generations this will take, chicken genetics calculator says wheaten to duckwing makes duckwing and you have to cross those to wheaten to get more wheaten, but ai, Google, and other threads here say wheaten is dominant over duckwing, so I'm just curious which is true. I know how BBS and gold/silver genetics work, just asking about the wheaten to duckwing :). Thank you!
 
Hi, I'm just curious how wheaten genetics work when crossing to duckwing. I'm hoping to make blue (gold) wheaten and silver wheaten/salmon in the main breed I work with, and I am using blue breasted red to wheaten to make the blue wheaten and silver duckwing to wheaten to make silver wheaten. I'm just curious how many generations this will take, chicken genetics calculator says wheaten to duckwing makes duckwing and you have to cross those to wheaten to get more wheaten, but ai, Google, and other threads here say wheaten is dominant over duckwing, so I'm just curious which is true. I know how BBS and gold/silver genetics work, just asking about the wheaten to duckwing :). Thank you!
If what you really want is chicks that are pure for the Wheaten gene (E^Wh), then you should be able to get some in the second generation. For that, it does not really matter whether Duckwing is dominant over Wheaten or vice versa.

Cross the Wheaten and the Duckwing, and you've got chicks that are E^Wh/e+ (one Wheaten gene, one Duckwing gene.)

Breed those chicks back to Wheaten, or breed them to each other, and you should get some chicks that are E^Wh/E^Wh (pure for Wheaten). That would be about 50% if you crossed back to Wheaten, or 25% if you breed the crossed chicks to each other.

I would take a good look at your Wheaten chicks and your Duckwing chicks, then at the crossed chicks you produce. Taking photos might be a good idea. Duckwing chicks usually have clear stripes in the down. Wheaten chicks mostly do not. Mixed chicks tend to have some amount of striping.

When you get some pure Wheaten chicks in your second or later generations of breeding, you can probably pick them out by sight, just based on the down color. Mark them, or put them in a separate pen, and choose your next generation of breeders from them. After that, the Duckwing gene should be gone, so you will not have to think about it any more.

I know how BBS and gold/silver genetics work, just asking about the wheaten to duckwing :).
There may also be some other genes involved in making good wheaten vs. good duckwing chickens, but breeding back to Wheaten for a few generations will probably fix most of them.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom