No. There are 2 totally different sets of genes that make up these two colors. Champagne is a dilution gene and there is now a test for it. (see Related Links for more information)
Liver Chestnut is genetically just chestnut (same color as sorrel) but is visually darker. There are many shades of a red base color but they are still all a red base color. There is no test for Liver Chestnut because, at this time, it is not considered a color at all, but a way to describe a darker red horse.
If you breed a gold champagne to a liver chestnut, you can get chestnut, gold champagne, liver chestnut or a darker gold champagne. The chances for Liver or the darker gold champagne is probably less than plain chestnut/sorrel or gold champagne.
Chocolate Palomino is also not a "color" but is a word to describe a darker palomino. Could be a sooty gene darkening the palominos appearance. There are other colors that people call chocolate too and they are totally unrelated genetically to the palomino. Silver dapple is the best example.
Palomino isn't a breed of horse, it is a colour. Answer 2: As stated above Palomino is a color, not a breed. The Palomino horse registries are color registries, not breed associations. You get Palomino coloring by breeding a horse with the cream gene to a chestnut and you should get a palomino. Any breed that carries both the cream and chestnut colorings can produce a palomino.
Haflinger
Palomino
No they cannot as Palomino is a color and not a breed. Plus Palomino coloring does not always breed true as it is a dilution of Chestnut.
Since palomino is a color and not a true breed, the predators would vary slightly depending on the horses location. Palomino is a chestnut horse that inherited one copy of the cream gene and was born palomino. That means that palomino horses can occur in any breed with both chestnut and cream colored horses. In most areas a horses predators are dogs/ wolves, big cats, bears, and humans.
The foal's base color will be chestnut. 50% chance of palomino. The sooty factor may or may not be present.
Genetic research says you are more likely to get a Palomino.I had 1 Palomino and 3 chestnuts out of one mare and a light sorrel out of another.
Breeding for a Palomino foal is not an easy task since the coloration is often an 'accident'. One reliable method is to breed a Palomino with a light Chestnut of Eastern blood.
Sometimes it is true that breeding two palominos will result in a cremello foal. When bred together, two palominos can produce: 25% Cremello 25% Palomino 50% Chestnut
Palomino is a color and not a breed, therefore a palomino colored horses speed will be determined by it's breed. Since Palomino can only exist in a breed where the red (chestnut) gene and cream dilution are present it will limit it to those breeds.A palomino horse of most any breed will be able to run at the average galloping speed of 18-25 MPH.A palomino colored Thoroughbred or Quarter Horse would be able to gallop at 25-45 MPH on average.
Palomino is a color and not a breed. Palomino's came into being when a cremello(Dilute color) horse bred with a chestnut colored horse, thus creating a palomino colored foal. The color was favored throughout the centuries and promoted by queens and kings.
You could get either a palomino or a chestnut. Since a palomino is a diluted chestnut, and a chestnut has no dilution genes, it will balance out the foal's genes so that it could be either color! Good Luck!