So a Palomino mare is probably genetically AaCrcree, aaCrcree or she could carry At
The term brown for the stallion is ambiguous so he could be AtacrcrEe AtAcrcrEE or AtAtcrcrEE or AtAtcrcrEe or he could carry the rare B gene or actually be liver chestnut. For the sake of simplicity we will assume that brown means black with a
tan or red muzzle and flanks.
They could produce a palomino, chestnut, bay, brown, black, smokey black, buckskin
50% chance of a dilute (cream foal) what color the cream gene modifies if inherited is basically an unknown.
Palomino is a color and not a breed. Palomino's came into being when a cremello(Dilute color) horse bred with a chestnut colored horse, thus creating a palomino colored foal. The color was favored throughout the centuries and promoted by queens and kings.
Palomino is a color breed (PHBA) or color within a breed (AQHA, MHA, TJC etc.) Breeders interested in the genetic mutation selected the color in conjunction with other characteristics. When the mutation first occurred is an unknown.
Maiden mare: never been bred Open mare: had a foal but not bred back to a stallion Barren mare: bred or bred back to a stallion but not in foal
Usually the darker color will dominate. But sometimes the genes of the parents can overpower the darker color. You really can not be sure. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- It really depends on whether the black horse is homozygous (EE) or heterozygous (Ee). Horses are born with a base color from each parent. E represents black and e represents red. Black is dominate over red. If you get two red genes (ee) you always end up with a chestnut. If you get one or two black genes (Ee/EE) you end up with a black horse as long as you don't have agouti (A-Bay). So if you have a black horse with Ee bred to a chestnut horse ee, you have a 50/50 chance of getting a chestnut. If you breed a black horse with EE to a chestnut horse ee, you have a 100% chance of a black horse because they black (E) gene is dominate. Hope that clarifies it :) Fuangel29
There's no for sure way to tell but the foal could be either like the mother or the father. There is also a possibility that the foal could be a completely different colour, maybe like it's grandparents or distant relatives.
usually brendall or brendall brown or red
If the stallion carries the a gene and is heterozygous for roan your chances of a true blue roan are 50% if your mare is Ee. If she is EE there is no chance of a chestnut coated foal so the color of the foal will be controlled by the genetics of the stallion at the agouti site...either brown, bay or black.
Yes, it is safe because horses of any color may be bred with horses of any other color. It does not matter. Any horse can be bred to any horse as long as the two breeds are of similar size. Frankly, a gray Lipizzaner may be bred to a dun mustang as long as they are of similar sizes.
In the wild, the same as every other horses! palaminos originate from the North American plains so their habitat would be a sandy and grassy sort of environment with big water hoels. Ever seen Spirit? (the film) it looks a bit like that. Same sort of environment as American Buffalo as well.
Sometimes it is true that breeding two palominos will result in a cremello foal. When bred together, two palominos can produce: 25% Cremello 25% Palomino 50% Chestnut
Since the term creme is used (the assumption here will be that the stallion is a cremello which is a chestnut colored horse with two Creme genes). We know this stallion is ee at the extension site and CrCr at the creme site. We dont' know what the genetics of the stallion is at the Agouti site but the genetics here would come into play in the color of the foal if the brown mare passes an E allele to the offspring. A general idea of the color possibilities can be determined by looking at the color of the parents of the stallion in an attempt to assertain his genetics at the Agouti site. The mare will be the brown horse in this example. Brown in the strictest sense is a horse that is At- (at the Agouti site) and Ee or EE at the extension site. If either of the brown mare's parents was a chestnut the mare is At-Ee. If either of the brown mare's parents was a true black the mare is AtaEe orAtaEE. If both the mare's parents are brown study of the various colors of the parents and grandparents of the mare may give some insight into the genetics of the mare. Since the e (red) allele has a very high frequency in most horse populations we will assume that the mare is At-Ee. Bred to a cremello stallion who is --eeCrCr 50% chance of the foal being palomino --eeCrcr 50% chance of the foal being some type of dilute because it is Ee at the extension site. This could be buckskin, smokey black, sooty buckskin. If the mare is EE at the extension site any foal produced from this mating will be buckskin, smokey black or sooty buckskin depending on the alleles present at the Agouti sites of both parents. Simplest way to know what you'll get is if the stallion and mare are color tested. The stallion would only need testing for info on the Agouti site. The mare would need to be tested for Agouti and Extension.
brown and tan black and tan That is a dumb question. It depends on what breed and what color dog was bred and the chromosomes.