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@nicalandia suspects that heterozygotes of white crested and European mottled would produce white crested and mottled birds, province that they are incompletely dominant over each other. Correct?In my previous comment, I included examples of offspring from a white crested black polish hen that I suspected was carrying mottle. I bred the hen to a tolbunt male to test my suspicions. Some offspring hatched with mottle, and some did not. It was a small hatch, but the results were roughly 50% of each. This confirmed my suspicion that the hen had one allele of the mottle gene. All offspring had a white crest. The Tolbunt that I used for test breeding was bought directly from a line that was created using only gold laced polish and Russian Orloff chickens. There was no Houdan in the bloodline, so the tolbunt contributor did not have the gene for a white crest. This means that the white crest on all of the offspring came from the white crested black parent. This confuses me because any other mix I've done or seen that only had one white crested parent did not result in a white crest.
If the white crest was a recessive allele of mottle, wouldn't the offspring need this particular allele from both parents to express? And how can both mottle AND white crest express on the same bird of they are alleles of each other? Mottle is recessive and must have two copies to express, but if the white crest is an allele of mottle, then a chicken with a white crest would only be able to have one mottle gene, and thus mottle shouldn't express mottle on the body.