The Percheron is not just black. They can be black or grey; chestnut and bay are very rare. Percherons can carry minimal facial markings and white on the lower parts of their legs. The Friesian is a breed that is limited to just the black color with no white markings.
The Fjord
Friesian
The color of a foal's coat, have nothing to do with their sire and dam's coat(s). There is a chance their coat WILL be one color of their parents', but it does't always happen. You can't predict a horse's coat color before its birth. I hoped I helped you with your question......... -ColorMeSilk
The Frisian (also spelled Friesian) Horse Mfire
It depends on the horse's genetics. Chestnut is recessive to black, therefore a chestnut horse always carries two chestnut genes but a black horse could be carrying two black genes OR a black and a chestnut, but the black is dominant therefore the horse has a black coat. Think of it as the black coat always sits 'on top' of the chestnut coat so if a horse has a black gene it will always show up but chestnut will only show up if there are no black genes at all. If you breed a homozygous dominant (two black genes) black horse to a chestnut, the foal will always be heterozygous dominant black. (One black gene and one chestnut gene) If you breed a heterozygous dominant (one black one chestnut) black horse to a chestnut, the foal has a 50% chance of being heterozygous dominant black and a 50% chance of being homozygous recessive chestnut. (two red genes) If you have no idea what your black horse's color genes are, think of it as having a 75% chance of a black foal, 25% chance of a chestnut foal.
a horse marked with black and white coat is known as a PieBald
You cant, you get a female or male orange roan, and breed it with a another gender horse with black coat and blue mane and tail with a vitamin like this Reg jockey+ Orange Roan Fem+ Black coat blue mane and tail male+ viatmin OR Reg Jockey+ Orange roan male+ Black coat blue mane and tail fem + viatamin
The coat color of the Kuvasz breed is white. The breed will have a black nose.
It can be both. Mustangs vary widely in coat colouration, from a light dun or rarely white to black or dark chestnut.
Well, Black is a coat color, NOT a breed. A horse's coat color has NOTHING to do with its temperment. Example: If a Thoroughbred is black, it doesn't make it a different breed.Today, there are some popular coat colors that ARE registered as breeds. One of these is a Palomino. But only specific horses (special requirements) are known as a Palomino. One of its parents was one ( dam or sire).VOCABULARYCoat - a horse's exterior or color outside.Breed - a specific horse. Example: Quarter Horse.Thoroughbred - a popular breed. Known (mostly) for racing.Palomino - 1) a coat color 2) a special breedDam - a horse's motherSire - a horse's father.I hope my answer helped for your question........- ColorMeSilk
A leopard Appaloosa
Buckskin is not a breed of horse but a color. There is a buckskin registry but it has nothing to do with the breed of the horse but his coat color. The Pinto registry is the same thing. The Buckskin registry will take any breed of horse as long as it has the buckskin color.