It depends, it could be any color. It could be more silver it could be more brown. You'll have to wait for them to pop out!
silver is just a diluted chocolate gene.so to answer the question chocolate!
they could make black puppies, chocolate puppies and maybe even golden puppies if they are lucky because my golden labrador and my another golden one made 6 golden puppies and 1 black!
because mix the color together and they make chocolate color
A purebred Scottish Fold can have a chocolate silver tabby coat. The chocolate color is considered a hybrid color in the Scottish Fold.
Any litter of purebred Labrador retrievers can including puppies who are yellow, chocolate, or black at the same time. The color at birth is the color they grow into adulthood with.Also the colour of the pup has nothing to do with how the puppy will grow up.
So far my 8 week old puppy looks like a black lab with possibly long hair on the ears. I saw one litter with both black and brown pups, but 6 of the 11 of this litter were all black, with features of the lab.
it depends
You never know - could be golden/yellow, chocolate, or even black. These are two different dog breeds.
The puppies would be labs (like the mom and dad) ,but the color or colors would depend entirely on which color genes they received from each parent. The black color is dominant; the possibilities for a black puppy are EEBB, EEBb,EeBB, or EeBb. The possibilities for a yellow puppy are eeBB, eeBb, or eebb. Both EEbb and Eebb would produce a chocolate lab. So, to be yellow, the puppy must receive the 'e' gene from both parents, and to be chocolate, the puppy must have received the 'b' gene from both parents--any other combination will produce a black puppy. It should be noted that the combination of eebb will always produce a dog that is yellow, but that has chocolate pigmentation around its eye rims, and on its nose. This is not currently an 'accepted' color for registration with the AKC. Wait what would the majority of the puppies be? Black, yellow, or chocolate? There is also times where is a greyish color, but its rare. We had two black labs stay with us for several months. The female had 9 puppies, 5 were yellow labs, 4 were black, both parents were black labs.
yep - think chocolate is a recessive gene - so one from each parent is needed for the colour to be expressed. The chocolate lab will have two recessive genes and only if the yellow lab carries the recessive and passes it on is there a chance of the colour coming through.
Silver dilutes black pigment. Silver has no effect on Red. And a black horse carrying the silver gene will be brownish/chocolate with flaxen mane and tail.
It's a mutt.. there's no guarantee on color. Black "could" fade to a silver or blue.