(pronounced: tow be yah' no)
Tobiano is pronounced tuh-BYAH-noh.
Yes, a horse with tobiano and sabino genetics can produce a homozygous tobiano foal - when bred to another horse with at least one tobiano gene.
If the horse is bred to another horse with at least one tobiano gene, it is possible the foal may be homozygous tobiano.
The Tobiano foals are sold on Desert Isle, at the adoption center. It's located in the small forest, east of Hotton.
Tobiano and Overo
A tobaino paint is a type of coloured breed of a horse I think. Tobiano is a type of marking that can be found on pinto marked horses and within the Paint horse breed.
I think you mean a tobiano horse. :) Tobiano is a coat pattern found in Paints and Pintos. A tobiano horse's base color will be white, with patches of another color - perhaps brown, or black. The opposite is overo, in which the horse is a solid color with patches of white overlaying it. A tovero is a mix of both patterns, and is not as common.
I believe you meant Tobiano. Tobiano is not refering to colors as much as a pattern of colors. Tobiano can be any color and large white spots. Generally if you were to look at a tobianos head, just its head, you would not be able to tell it was a spotted horse. The spots on a Tobiano horsewill cover all four of its legs. They will be white up to at least its knees, most of the time higher. The spots will also cross over the back and a mane and tail with two different colors is common.
Tricolored generally means a bay with white. If the stallion is homozygous for dun but has produced red dun foals...the foal could be dun, or red dun. If the mare and stallion carry the a (black) gene they could produce a grulla. The presence of spotting will depend on the genetics of the mare. If she is homozygous for the tobiano gene the foal will be tobiano and some color of dun. Heterozygous tobiano or frame overo the foal will be dun and spotted 50% of the time. If the mare is a tovero (carries the frame and tobiano genes) the foal will have a high chance of tobiano or overo patterning. Sabino spotting patterns could be present in the stallion with no real apparent signs and if the mare have sabino genetics...white patterning could vary considerably. If the stallion is heterozygous for dun and the mare is heterozygous for tobiano or overo...color and white patterns as well as solid non dun coloring is possible.
Yes they can, there are certain bloodlines within the Selle francias that carry the tobiano pinto gene.
Palomino is a Non silver carrier:29.17% -Buckskin29.17% -Bay16.67% -Palomino16.67% -Chestnut4.17% -Smoky Black4.17% -BlackPalomino is a Heterozygous (nZ) Silver Carrier:16.67% - Palomino16.67% - Chestnut14.58% - Silver Buckskin14.58% - Silver Bay14.58% - Buckskin14.58% - Bay2.08% - Smoky Black2.08% - Silver Smoky Black2.08% - Silver Black2.08% - BlackPalomino is Homosygous Silver Carrier:29.17% -Silver Buckskin29.17% -Silver Bay16.67% -Palomino16.67% -Chestnut4.17% -Silver Smoky Black4.17% -Silver Black
Official Opening - April 11, 2008
The type of white pattern is not mentioned here...for the sake of simplicity I will assume that the stallion and mare are Tobiano for the first example. Stallion aaE-Toto or aaE-ToTo Mare --eeToto or --eeToTo (genetics of mare at agouti site is unknown and may be determined to some degree by looking at the colors of the parents and grand parents. If either the stallion or the mare is ToTo (homozygous for tobiano) 100% of the foals will be Tobiano and 50% of the foals from this mating will be homozygous for Tobiano. If the Stallion is Ee at the extension site 50% of the foals will be chestnut. If the Stallion is EE at the extension site there will be no chestnut foals. The genetics of the mare at the agouti site will determine the color of any foals that are Ee or EE at the extension site. Since the stallion is black: aa he can only pass the a allele to his offspring. If the mare carries the a allele, 50% of the foals will be black.