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.
Yellow Lab
not necessarly, my puppies i have came from a yellow and a yellow and 1 is a yellow the other is a black lab, and 1 is a chocolate lab
It depends on if they are pure bred and what kind of genetics they have.
I think that labs and retrievers are quite similar. We got a puppy that came from a chocolate lab and a yellow lab/collie mix. The puppies looked like yellow labs. Chocolate coloring is recessive, so your puppies will probably be the color of your golden retriever, and may have slightly longer or softer hair than the average lab. Also, if your golden has any chocolate lab in her history, you may end up with dudley puppies, which are yellow with a recessive chocolate gene that causes amber colored eyes and pink nose instead of the dark brown eyes and black nose.
All colors of labrador can be possible: chocolate, black, yellow with pale nose & lips, yellow with dark nose & lips. It's a bit difficult to calculate the color ratio, but I think most of the puppies will be black if the black lab never had a yellow ancestor and the yellow dog has a dark nose and dark lips
Our female lab is blonde and our male is black. Their first litter was 2 blondes, 4 chocolates and 1 black.
Most likely yellow, it depends on what color the male dog is also. Even if they are both yellow labs, there is a possibility the one of the puppies could be brown or black.
You can have all three colors in any litter.It doesn't mather what colour parents are.
They will have a lab that is light brown with a hint of yellow...
Yes, but it depends on what type of gene mixes with the X and Y chromosomes.
Any color.
A puppies urine should be yellow on a puppy pad.
Louise Labe has written: 'Oeuvres de Louise Labe' 'Oeuvres comple tes' 'Louise Labe'
It will probably turn the color of their ears.
Most of the time it doesn't matter what color the parents are they can have all colors. With yellow on yellow you will get predominantly yellow, and same with the "lemon" lab also.
Sine labe = Without defect.
If you breed a Yellow Labrador and a Chocolate Labrador they will produce solid chocolate puppies and solid Yellow puppies and Black puppies with the exception of a few white markings. No matter what color labs you breed they will always be pure unless you have a mixed breed or a completely different breed as the mother or father. Then it's up to the traits of that other breed.
Labe Safro died on 1966-04-09.
Labe Safro was born on 1891-08-14.
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.
You never know - could be golden/yellow, chocolate, or even black. These are two different dog breeds.
nfee