Bay could be AaEE AaEe AAEE or AAEe the roan component could be RnRn or Rnrn.
The color of the parents and grandparents may help the breeder determine if the parent could be homozygous for Rn, A.
The chestnut parent is --ee. Again the color of the parents and grandparents may help determine the genetics of this parent at the agouti site.
If the bay roan parent is AaEeRnrn and the chestnut parent is Aaee
25% chance of chestnut roan
25% chance of chestnut
12.5 % chance of black
12.5% chance of black roan
12.5 % chance of bay
12.5% chance of bay roan
Cherry Chestnut would be a lighter chestnut then the red chestnut but they both basicly are the same.
White
Well first off colt is a male and Filly is a female...foal is a baby horse. So if you breed a chestnut to a brown horse you would likely get the following chances. 58.34% bay/brown, 33.33% chestnut, and 8.33% black.
The black horse's genetics is either aaEe or aaEE. If the Black horse is aaEE the foal cannot be chestnut. If the black horse is aaEe there is a 50% chance of the foal being chestnut. The possible colors for any non chestnut foal will be based on the genetics of the chestnut horse at the Agouti site. if the chestnut horse is aa any non chestnut foal will be black if the chestnut horse is Aa there is a 50% chance of a bay foal and a 50% chance of a black foal. if the chestnut horse is AA any non-chestnut foal will be bay.
The most comon color for a horse is Brown or chestnut. But if it is a Arab the most comon color would be gray.
The Friesian horse typically only comes in black and that is the only allowed color in the registry. But they can very rarely come in what the association calls 'red' which would be chestnut, but these are rare and not allowed to breed.
that would be the Halfinger
not really but the closest colour to orange for a horse would be chestnut
You could get either a palomino or a chestnut. Since a palomino is a diluted chestnut, and a chestnut has no dilution genes, it will balance out the foal's genes so that it could be either color! Good Luck!
It depends on whether the stallion or mare is homogeneous for a certain color gene. You could have many possibilities, but a logical predication would be either palomino, chestnut, white, or bay. (Bay and chestnut being the two most common horse colors.)
You can certainly get an offspring if any mare and any stud breed when the mare is ready and of course both are fertile. If the cremello was bred with a palomino, a cremello foal would most likely be produced, thanks to the double dilution genes. If bred to a buckskin, then a perlino foal would be the resulting offspring.
If you breed a black horse and a gray horse, you can get quite a variety of colors. If the gray horse has a black base (was born black), then the offspring will either be black or black-based gray. If the gray horse is chestnut-based or bay-based, however, you can get black, chestnut, bay, black-based gray, chestnut-based gray, or bay-based gray. It's most likely that the gray horse is black-based, though genetic testing would probably be required to find out for sure.