from the one i have seen it was just the same color as a regular peacock but with a white chest
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Blue,green and brownish gold
I think that you will have yellow becaues green color could make yellow.
There are two species of peacocks*. The Indian peacock is considered Least Concern (which means it is not endangered whatsoever). The other species, the Green peacock (or Javan), is endangered. In general, endangered species are protected, however I can't find any information on conservation programs for the green peacock. *The real name for peacock if peafowl. Scientifically, "peacock" is used only for males, peahen for females, and peafowl for both.
Peafowl (Peahen and Peacock) like green plant shoots, flowers, and any seeds they can find. They like to eat fruit when they can find it. They also like flesh, like small lizards or snakes, and insects.
i think that a green peacock is just a normal peacock like a indian peacock
possibly, blue and green because male peacocks spread their feathers to attract peahens
The Indian Peacock: Pavo cristatus; The Green Peacock: Pavo muticus; and the Congo Peacock, Afropavo congensisThe Indian peacock is bright blue blue, the green peacock is bright green, and the congo peacock is dark green.
Peacock blue is a slightly greeny blue. Mix 3 parts cerulean blue and 1/2 part thealo green. Adjust to the blue side if desired.
In pea plants, the yellow color (Y) is typically dominant over the green color (y). If a heterozygous yellow pea plant (Yy) is crossed with a green pea plant (yy), the possible genotypes of the offspring would be 50% heterozygous yellow (Yy) and 50% homozygous green (yy). Therefore, the offspring would exhibit a 50% chance of being yellow and a 50% chance of being green.
This is a basic Mendel cross where the master himself found out that yellow was the dominant color to green. Many years later we found out that there is another gene involved and that the colors have to do with chlorophyll - not just color. If a pure green is crossed to a purebred yellow, then all the offspring will be yellow. However they do carry the green gene since if these yellow offspring are self-fertilized, they will produce the standard 3/4 yellow and 1/4 green phenotypes.
When Mendel crossed pea plants with green pods with those with yellow pods, the offspring all had green pods if the green pod parent was homozygous. If the green pod parent was heterozygous, then half the offspring had green pods and half had yellow pods.