No. Dominicker (or dominick) chickens are a separate breed.
No, not always. The offspring can be white, black, black and white or shades of both.
a rooster has a crown, a hen is white, and a chic is yellow
yellow
Black chickens like white chickens and white chickens like black chickens.
Nothing. Hen, laying hen, broiler hen. The amount of feed they receive and the age they live to is about the only difference. The laying hen will live to produce eggs and the broiler hen will eat well until she reaches optimal weight and be processed into meat.
no. black is dominant to white, and white is dominant to blue. the only sure way to get a blue chicken is to breed two other blue chickens.
You allow a white leghorn hen to mate with a white leghorn rooster. The eggs produced by that hen are then incubated for 21 days and a chick emerges from the fertilized egg. That chick will grow to be a white leghorn chicken.
This cross of a black chicken with a white chicken producing an all black and white speckled offspring is an inheritance known as co-dominant inheritance.
A Black Star rooster has a white dot on its head, where the females do not. Black Stars as sex-link chickens meaning you can tell their sex by their color once hatched.
Not sure of the current going rate but in the "old days" a black chicken was 5/7ths the cost of a white chicken.
An Erminette chicken is a chicken with a gene for black feathers and a gene for white feathers. Since the genes are co-dominant, the Erminette chicken has black and white feathers, rather than one or the other or grey.
To breed a Gold Rooster, you'd need to breed a Black and White Rooster from the Silverblood and Goldblood bloodlines.