A buckskin horse carries three important colour genes: the black gene, the agouti gene (which restricts the colour to the points, creating bay) and one dilution gene (changing bay to buckskin).
If both the parents are buckskin, the foal is guaranteed to inherit the agouti gene - so it must be bay, buckskin or perlino, which are the agouti colours.
It has a 25% chance of not inheriting the dilution gene from either parent. This would produce a bay foal. There is a 50% chance that the foal will inherit the dilution gene from one parent, but not the other - in this case, the foal will be buckskin. The other 25% chance is that the foal inherits the dilution gene from both parents, producing a double dilute. A double dilute over agouti would result in a perlino foal.
Most likely would be cremello, palomino, chestnut (sorrel) or another buckskin.
Yes, if "white" means gray...there would be a 50% chance of any foal produced having the gray gene. Whether the foal will be chestnut, buckskin, bay or palomino will hinge on the genetics of the mare. If "white" means maximum expression sabino...then there is a white component that is independant of the possible colors. Again the foal could be chestnut, buckskin, palomino or bay will hinge on the genetics of the mare.
Black aaEEcrcr or aaEecrcr Palomino --eeCrcr (we don't know the genetics of this horse at the Agouti site hence the --). If the black horse is aaEEcrcr there will be no chesnut or palomino foals born from this mating. Depending on the alleles at the agouti site of the palomino horse the resulting foal could be black, smokey black, bay or buckskin. If the black horse is aaEecrcr there is a 50% chance of chestnut or palomino. The remaining 50% will be non chestnut based, again dependant on the genetics of the palomino at the agouti site. Possibly black, bay, smokey black or buckskin.
There's no way to guarantee that any two horses will produce a buckskin, to the best of my knowledge. To produce a buckskin, however, at least one parent must carry the cream gene. The cream gene is responsible for lightening a bay horse into buckskin, and it is also what causes palomino and other colors. If you breed two smokey black (black with one cream gene) horses, you cannot get a buckskin. Likewise, if you breed two palomino horses, or one palomino and one chestnut, you will not get a buckskin.
Typically a cremello or palomino crossed to a bay or black horse will produce a buckskin foal.
palomino
Yes a black and a buckskin can produce a buckskin according to the extension and agouti statues of each parent.
you will get almost any colour because your horses colour is not determined by the colour of it' s parents. you can have two chestnut horses that breed to make a bay foal. unless the horse is bred to be a specific colour, like the Cleavland Bay breed. the foals colour all depends on its genetic material.
This will vary according to exact genetics but you would have a 50% chance or grater of getting a Grey horse and a 50% or less chance at one of the following colors: Buckskin, Bay, Chestnut, Black, Palomino, Smoky Black.
Find a Perlino Stallion who is genetically AAEECrCr and the breeding will produce 100% buckskin foals no matter the genetics of the mare. If the stallion is AaEeCrCr or AAEeCrCr the foal could be a palomino. The chestnut mare could be aaee, Aaee or AAee combinations with a stallion who has Aa genetics where the mare is aa or Aa at the Agouti site could produce a smokey black.
If you mean Starlight on The Saddle Club, she's a buckskin
Yes, if the genetics of the stallion and the mare at the Extension sites are both, at least Ee.