It would simply be a paint/ mustang cross. There's no special name for it that I know of.
Well I am answering this about howrse.com
the answer depends on the genetics of your mare. If you mare is 50 percent paint and 50 percent mustang or something else, who knows what the foal could be. If your mare is more something else or has an amount of mustang in her, the chances are you will get a mustang.
yes. as long as one of the parents has a pinto/paint breed/coloring you can get a paint foal
Palomino
To produce a Paint horse the mare must be a Quarterhorse or a registered paint. There is no mention of whether the mare has substantial white leg markings which may indicate that she is a minimally expressed tobiano or possibly sabinos Which would add to these results. Paint is a breed, so even horses with no white can be registered with the American Paint Horse Association. Breed her to a homozygous tobiano paint stallion for a 100% chance of a spotted foal. Breed her to a heterozygous Tovero or Tobero for a 75% chance of a spotted foal.
This depends on the DNA characteristics. If your mare or the stallion is homogeyous for a colour or pattern, then that will likely show up in the foal.
Buckskin or Smoky Black
87.89% -Bay6.25% -Chestnut5.86% -Black
You can buy one from the auctions or the private sales. Or you can breed a mare and hope that the foal turns out to be a colt that will grow up to be a stallion.
The stallion attacks the attacker while the mother takes her foal back into the safety of the herd.
So long as they are from the same breed and both parents are registered, yes you can breed a trotter to a pacer and register it.
It really depends on the breed of the mare and stallion. Normally, the foal would just be a cross breed, but, for example, if you bred a quarter horse and an Arabian, the foal would be classed as a Quarab. Or, if you breed a warm blooded sport horse with an Irish Draught horse, the foal would be classed as an Irish Sport Horse. Hope this helps! :)
Yes, it is possible for a chestnut mare bred to a buckskin stallion to produce a buckskin foal. The genetics of the mare and stallion can combine in a way that results in a foal with the buckskin coat color, which is determined by the presence of the cream gene.
In most cases, the father of a foal does not play a role in raising or caring for the foal. The responsibility of caring for and raising the foal falls mainly on the mother (mare). The stallion typically continues with his normal activities within the herd or separately.