well horses arent like people usually. they tend to be one color for example the dad could be black and the mom could be buckskin so the horse probably wont be a mixture it will either be black or buckskin. NOT MIXED
Not knowing whether either parent are carriers for the Agouti gene and whether the buckskin carries the Ee or EE gene, any of the following are possibilities:
Buckskin
Bay
Palomino
Chestnut
Black
Smokey Black
This varies...it all depends on what colors that the sire and dam have in their lines. For instance, if the sire's great,great grand sire is grey the foal could be grey. So really, the foal could be any color that either parents' bloodlines.
That's an unusual combination. Based on the colors specified and the possible mix that would incur, I would guess it would be a blue roan. If you do actually breed, be sure to let us all know how it turned out....
The stallion is A-E-Cr- (the -s represent unknown alleles).
Since there is no mention that the mare is a red dun...we will assume she is
genetically similar to the stallion in terms of her base color or A-E-Dn-.
If both are heterozygous at the extension site Ee
The foal could be chestnut, bay, red dun, palomino, buckskin, dun, dunalino (palomino and dun), dunskin (buckskin and dun).
If both are heterozygous for black at the agouti site (Aa) the foal could also
be smokey black (true black with the creme gene), grulla, or smokey grulla (black, dun and cream) or black.
Stallion base color genetics could be AaCrcrEe
AACrcrEE
Spotting patterns could be Tobiano (heterozygous or homozygous)
Overo (heterozygous only)
Sabino (heterozygous/homozygous)
Sabero
Tovero
Mare base color genetics could be AAcrcree
Aacrcree
aacrcree
If we deal with the base color to start with we can see that the color possibilities
could be bay, black, smokey black, buckskin, chestnut or palomino depending on
the genetics of the parent.
If the stallion is EE there will be no chestnut or palomino offspring produced.
The spotting genetics is made complex because there is no information on which pattern types are in play. We do know that if he is overo is is heterozygous for that trait. All paint spotting patterns are dominant although sabino has other controlling factors that change expression.
Sorrel Mare would be --ee (-- is unknown genetics at the agouti site and ee is homozygous recessive at the extension site. Buckskin Stallion is A-E-Crcr or A-EECrcr. Since the e allele is generally at a very high frequency in most horse populations we'll assume that the stallion is A-EeCrcr. 50% of all foals will be red based, either palomino or sorrel 50% of all foals will be non-red based, either bay or buckskin
Spirit is a buckskin Kiger mustang stallion. Most horses of the kiger mustang breed are duns, but Spirit is a buckskin, a color most notably different from duns by the absence of primitive markings, such as a dorsal stripe and barring. Spirit is also a stallion, meaning he's intact, unlike geldings.
Buckskin is a color of a horse. They are not a specific breed, though there are certain breeds that only have the color. For example, the Mustang.
Spirit, Stallion of the Cimmaron's coat is dun.
A horses color will have absolutely no effect on it's height. Also since black is usually an available color option for most breeds, the height would vary by breed.
50% chance of a creme dilute either a palomino, a buckskin or a smokey black based on the base coat color genetics of the parents. The sorrel mare could be AAee Aaee or aaee The buckskin stallion could be AAEe, AAEE, AaEe, or AaEe If the stallion is AAEE all foals will be bay or buckskin. If both the stallion and the mare carry an a allele a smokey black could be produced.
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.
Buckskin is a color, not a breed.
Sorrel Mare would be --ee (-- is unknown genetics at the agouti site and ee is homozygous recessive at the extension site. Buckskin Stallion is A-E-Crcr or A-EECrcr. Since the e allele is generally at a very high frequency in most horse populations we'll assume that the stallion is A-EeCrcr. 50% of all foals will be red based, either palomino or sorrel 50% of all foals will be non-red based, either bay or buckskin
Buckskin is a color not a breed. There are buckskin Quarter Horses, Paints, ect. So the color of the horse has nothing to do with what they are used for.
Because Buckskin is a color of horse and not an actually breed, it has nothing to do with how big the horse will get. Many breeds of horses are capable of coming in the buckskin coloring and therefore , the color can range from the smallest horse size (around 4.2 hands, or 18inches) to the largest available horse sizes, nearly 21hh (or around 82 inches or just over 6ft, 10inches).
Well possibly, this would mainly depend on the color of the mare. Buckskin is a dilute color and will dilute the base color of a horse (Bay + Cream= buckskin etc,).
Spirit is a buckskin Kiger mustang stallion. Most horses of the kiger mustang breed are duns, but Spirit is a buckskin, a color most notably different from duns by the absence of primitive markings, such as a dorsal stripe and barring. Spirit is also a stallion, meaning he's intact, unlike geldings.
Buckskin is a color of a horse. They are not a specific breed, though there are certain breeds that only have the color. For example, the Mustang.
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.
It would depend on what color the Paint horse is. (Paint is a breed, Pinto is a marking, neither are an exact color.)
Looks at the descendents and gene types from both mare and stallion. The color perlino is basically diluted buckskin