If your asking this for the horse isle quiz, the answer is Noriker
Sugarbush Draft horses
A leopard Appaloosa
It would totally depend on the genetics of the Appaloosa and whether they were homozygous or heterozygous for certain things. wtf kinda question is this?!?!?!?!!?!?
Well the spots themselves are called spots. But there are different patterns including; Blanket ( with or without spots) Leopard, Snowflake, Marbled, Frosted, Few true spots, and several other recognized patterns.
leopard appaloosa
An Appaloosa is a bread of horse that has a leopard-spotted coat pattern.
Blanket, I'd say. If not, leopard.
it matters on the horses, some could have as little as five and others can have hundreds
Actualy, an Appaloosa is a breed of horse. You can always tell if a horse is an Appaloosa or not, because Appaloosa's always have spots of some sort on their body. However, there are different coats for Appaloosa's. Like a Spotted Blanket and an Appaloosa few spots, to name a few. Hope that helps!
The distinctive look of the original Appaloosa was the product of breeding by the Native Americans in the North West. The breed itself was created there. The genetics for the various spotting patterns may have been part of the gene pool of the original Spanish horses that were released/escaped to become a feral population since the Leopard complex gene exists in some European breeds of horses.
Take the boat at Earton Docks to Cat Isle -Leopard, Dun server <33
The Famous Appaloosa is an American breed of horse with leopard complex coloring that causes several unique patterns that have been in existence for a very long time. The American version which is the most famous of the leopard spotted breeds was originally developed by the Nez Perce tribe of the Pacific Northwest. The tribe attempted to cross into Canada to escape capture by the US army cavalry but failed. However the Army was very angry at the tribes near escape and ordered the tribes horses destroyed or crossed with draft horses. There were ranchers in Idaho who liked the tough and very hardy breed and began to breed them to their own ranch stock. The Original Appaloosa looked more like a Thoroughbred or Anglo-Arabian, but with numbers so low the ranchers decided to add Quarter Horses, Mustangs, and some Thoroughbreds to the gene pool, which changed the breed permanently. The modern Appaloosa is essentially just a leopard spotted Quarter Horse.