Donkey colors do not equate directly with those of a horse and I am not seeing the term Liver show up on sites dedicated to donkey genetics. You mention liver and white but donkeys colors are based on body color, point color and trim color so the white may or may not refer to point color.
The black coat color of the appaloosa mare could be aaEe or aaEE. If the mare is aaEE she can only produce a non-red foal. How that will interact with the Jack's color is unknown however, the control of red and non-red in donkeys and horses is the same so if the mare is EE the foal's base coat color will be dark if she is Ee and Liver is a red based color there is a 50% chance that the foal will be red.
If the appaloosa mare is homozygous for the leopard complex gene (Lp) any foal produced will have
appaloosa spotting.
Black is a color and not a breed. Appaloosa horses can be black.
On the game Horse Academy on Facebook, If you want to create a "specialty breed", you have to match certain horses to get them. For example, If you want a BLACK BLANKET APPALOOSA: Breed 2 black piants together BROWN BLANKET APPALOOSA: Breed 2 brown paints together I have also discovered how to create the Tiger Horse, and a silverish colored hose with the rare white or golden mane. I still have not yet discovered how to make the pink or green tinted horses. I am still experimenting with that one.
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!
Yes, they can go blind.
First off, Appaloosa is both a breed and a color gene. Pinto is just a patchy coloring and not a breed. The winner would likely be the more experienced horse, regardless of breed.
for a blanket appaloosa, heres the formula. brown: two brown horses with the white paint gene black: two black horses with the white paint gene. the mane and tail colors don't really matter. DO NOT CHANGE THE COAT OF A SPEC. BREED BECAUSE YOU CANNOT GET IT BACK AFTER!
Mainly, there are two specific breeds of horses with spots. The pinto and appaloosa. The pinto has fewer, larger spots, and comes in fewer variations, where the appaloosa has many , smaller spots, and comes in more variations, such as blanket and leopard appaloosa. But keep in mind, that paints and pintos are different, pinto is a breed, paint is a color. There are actually more than that - Knabstrupper and the English spotted pony are two others.
Appaloosa is a breed of horse known for its distinctive coat pattern, which includes spots and speckles.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun (breed of horse) Appaloosa.
Appaloosa is a breed of horse known for its distinctive coat pattern, which includes spots or speckles on a white background.
No they are not the same breed. The Appaloosa and Quarter horse are two seperate breeds.
appaloosas are registered with the American Appaloosa Horse Association (AAHA)The international breed registry is the APA: Appaloosa Horse Association