If the black and white mare is aaEe and bred to a cremello stallion --eeCrCr the foal
produced will be smokey black, buckskin, palomino based on the stallion's genetics at
the Agouti site.
If the mare is aaEE the foal will be smokey black, buckskin...no palomino foals.
The type(s) of pattern genetics the mare carries will determine the spotting pattern of the foal (or lack there of).
A Bay mare carries black and chestnut genes, but you don't know how many times the black has been restricted to the points. A cremello stallion carries only chestnut, but also a dilution gene that lightens the chestnut to gold. You don't know if he carries any genes to restrict black to the points either. You also don't know if either carry other genes such as dun, dappling, roaning, spots, etc. Based on this information, here are some of the colors that cross might produce:
Chestnut
Black
Bay
Palomino
Grulla
Buckskin
Dun
Roan
Overo
Sabino
The foal cannot be cremello or gray.
Black stallion is either aaEE or aaEe
Bay mare could be AaEe, AAEE, AaEE or AAEe
If either the stallion or the mare is EE there will be no chestnut foals produced.
If the Bay mare carries an a allele the foal could be either bay or black.
If the stallion is aaEE
Mare AaEE or AaEe 50% black 50% bay
Mare AAEE or AAEe 100% bay
If the stallion is aaEe
Mare AaEe 25% chestnut 37.5% bay 37.5% black
Mare AAEe 25% chestnut 75% bay
Probably a palimino color with a dark mane
You would breed a chestnut to a black, or if you wanted a bay paint, black paint to a black
No. Paint is not a color it is a breed. Pinto is a coat color that looks like a paint, yet can be on any other breed that alows it, but paint is it's own breed.
It would depend on what color the Paint horse is. (Paint is a breed, Pinto is a marking, neither are an exact color.)
chances are you will get a black horse with white small white specks.
No. Just like any other animal a cow's color depends on the breed and what color it's parents were.
Color is decided by genetics and nothing else. To get a grey paint you must breed at least one grey paint to another paint horse. Grey tends to be a dominant color and may override another color. The surest way to get grey is to breed two grey horses together.(And Paint is a breed, pinto is the markings.)
A paint is a breed. A pinto is a coloring. He is a pinto regardless of breed, but he could also be a paint depending on his parents.
the paint horse is a quarter horse. they are colored like brown and white, black and white. buckskin and white, any color that a horse is, with white.
paint? but im pretty sure paint is a breed...
Palomino is not a breed. Palomino is a COLOR. Just like paint horses are not a breed, they are a COLOR. Palomino can be found in most but not all breeds of horses.
It's a paint horse. A black and white paint horse.
Pinto is a color not a breed of horses. There is a Pinto Horse Association which can include any breed. The American Paint Horse Association includes only horses with Quarter Horse, Paint Horse, or Thoroughbred bloodlines. So a 'Pinto' is a white and any other color in 'patches' of any breed, while a 'Paint' is white and any other color in 'patches' of the Quarter Horse, Paint or Thoroughbred breeds.