Cataracts, Heart disease, and hip dysplasia are common hereditary problems. Any given color doesn't have anything with genetic conditions.
Blue, Brindle, Fawn, Black, pretty much any color except all white or merle
Some dogs' fur changes color in spots due to a genetic trait called "merle" or "piebald" that causes patches of different colored fur to appear on their coat.
When breeding a blue merle standard poodle to an apricot standard poodle, the potential coat colors of the offspring can include blue merle, apricot, and possibly variations such as cream or red, depending on the genetic makeup of the merle parent. The merle gene can affect the distribution of color, leading to a mottled appearance in some puppies. Additionally, factors like the presence of other color genes can influence the final coat colors. Therefore, while blue merle and apricot are the primary colors expected, there may be a range of shades and patterns in the litter.
Merle is not a color seen in purebred American Pit Bull Terriers or American Staffordshire Terriers. So any "pit bull" of this color is a mixed breed with a merle carrying breed (often Catahoula in the case of pit mixes) having been crossed in. This said, yes a brindle and merle breeding has the potential of producing 50% merle puppies and 50% non-merle. Brindle to merle may also produce a combination pattern of brindled merles.
a Blue Merle is a Border Collie that is a whiteish/gray color whit little black spots
There are four universally accepted colors of the Australian Shepeherd. Black tri, Blue merle, red tri and red merle.
A puppy's fur changes color in spots due to a genetic trait called "merle" or "piebald" that causes patches of different colored fur to appear on the coat. This is a natural variation in the dog's genetics that results in the unique coloring patterns seen in some breeds.
You already can see he is merle. Unless you are color blind I dont understand the nature of the question since with all respect a good look at the dog and you will see the color. One good recomendation is to take a good look and search in pitbull sites to find one with the same color and read what color the breeder says the dog is.
Shelties come in: Sable Blue Merle Tri Color Bi-Blue Bi-Black Shaded Sable Double Merle - double merle is when two blue merle shelties mate and there baby comes out mostly white. Those shelties are bound to be either deaf or blind. It's sad. :(
Merle Haggard had blue eyes. His striking blue eyes were often noted in photographs and performances throughout his music career. Haggard's appearance, including his eye color, contributed to his distinct persona as a country music legend.
There are six standard "show" colors in the U.S.; Fawn, brindle, black, blue, mantle, and harlequin.If you include non standard colors there are at least 29 total color/marking combinations I can recall; piebald/plattenhund, merle, blue merle, red merle, blue mantle, fawn mantle, brindle mantle, fawn harlequin, brindle harlequin,blue harlequin (or porcelain), merle harlequin, blue merle harlequin, red merle harlequin, chocolate, chocolate mantle, chocolate merle, chocolate harlequin, blue masked fawn, chocolate masked fawn, merle masked fawn, blue brindle, blue brindle harlequin, and white.I'm not sure on different colors of piebalds, haven't seen one, but I imagine each color category is possible.
you get ALL double merle puppies! O no!! . If you breed a double merle to a regular merle you get 50percent regular merle pups and 50percent double merle pups. If you breed a double merle to a solid colored dog or non-merle you get 100 percent merle puppies:) these are just the facts! Hope it helped.