If either horse is homozygous for roan the foal will be roan, if both are heterozygous there is a 75% chance that the foal will be roan.
If by strawberry roan you mean the stallion is a bay roan as opposed to a chestnut roan, we can surmise that the stallion is Rn-A-E-
The mare is Rn-aaE-
The base color of the foal, without regard to whether it is roan is as follows
If the stallion or mare is EE at the extension site they will produce either a bay or black foal...since the stallion is bay he could be AA (only bay foals) or Aa which will produce 50-50 bay or black with this mare.
If both the mare and the stallion are Ee at the extension site there is a 25% chance of a chestnut foal.
The color the foal will be will depend on the agouti and extension status of the mare and stallion, and whether or not the stallion is heterozygous or homozygous for roan. But color possibilities include:Bay, Bay roan, Black, blue roan ( black roan), Chestnut, or red roan (chestnut roan.)
It depends on what you breed it to. Most likely, from the information presented, you would get some variation of a roan.
gray with white hairs peppered in.
Having a mare breed with a stallion.
a fully grown female horse is called a mare & a fully grow male horse is called a stallion
It is probably referring to if a horse is of purebred genetics. Or simply if a horse is purebred Paint, or purebred QH, or purebred Arab, etc. whichever breed that horse may be. how much of that breed is in the horse. example: say you have a thoroughbred stallion who is pure. this means the stallion is 100% thoroughbred stallion and has no other breeds involved.
a stallion breed with a donkey is a macho horse they are taller than donkey but just as if not more stubborn
A mare and stallion breed and make baby called a foal.
A stallion is a male horse so not a particular breed. A black stallion can therefore be of any size.
All horse breeds have the same taxonomy, it does not change from breed to breed or by the color of the horse. Therefore a black stallion would be Equus ferus Caballus.
All horse breeds have the same taxonomy, it does not change from breed to breed or by the color of the horse. Therefore a black stallion would be Equus ferus Caballus.
The Black Stallion in the books and movies was an Arabian. In the TV series he was an American Quarter Horse. The horse feature in the books and in the movie of the Black Stallion was an Arabian stallion. The horse which appeared in the movie was actually called Cass Ole.
A stallion can be any size, and build, and any color. This is because stallions are male horses who have not been fixed. "Stallion" is a gender, not a breed, so they vary greatly, depending on their bloodlines and breed.
No. A stallion is a male horse that can still breed. A mare is a female horse.
a stallion
No, a stallion is a male horse, more specifically one that can breed.(as opposed to a gelding, or castrated male, who cannot breed)
A "stallion" is not a breed. It's a gender. A female horse is a mare and a male horse is a stallion. If the stallion has been neutered or castrated, he then is called a gelding. A stallion therefore, is an unaltered male of any breed of horse. There are miniature stallions all the way up to the Shire stallions.
a thuroughbred horse
By a mare and a stallion meeting. You get the gist.
It's an Andalusian.