A breed of dog A breed of dog
LOL, no part of "blue ocean fawn pit-bull" is a breed. "Pit bull" isn't even a breed. It's slang, generally referring to the American Pit Bull Terrier, American Staffordshire Terrier, or Staffordshire Bull Terrier. "Blue ocean fawn" is probably a breeder's pitifully elaborate attempt to describe the dog's coat color to make it sound "extra special". Fawn is a coat color, but blue ocean? Um...curious as to who came up with that load of crap. BTW if you're looking to get a pit pup, please research and talk to rescues/shelters first to get some real info from people who have some expertise on the pit breeds. They're typically not a good choice for first-time dog owners as they demand a huge amount of responsibility, commitment, patience, and time spent socializing, training, and exercising. They're not appropriate for many people, despite original good intentions. It's a dog that needs to be part of your family, in the house with you. There are some great resources out there if you're looking, but I do recommend a young or adult shelter/rescue pit as you can already see their temperament, and all the hard puppy work has been taken care of. If they've been bred with human aggressive traits (completely AGAINST what APBTs should be bred for), you'll know. Wanting a pup so you can raise it your way is understandable, but don't assume that just because you don't know a dog's background that it might "snap" someday. I was going to write more, but I have homework to get back to and I've gone off subject. You may not even be looking to get a pitte, lol. :-) Hope this helped.
Fawn is a color very wanted by people that breed pitbulls. But when the word blue comes in, most likely we are talking about bullie lines and not pitbulls. Anyways those are colors found in these dogs.
Yes, a purebred Italian Greyhound can have a blue fawn coat.
The Siamese is a type of a cat is fawn and has blue eyes. Its eyes can range from light to bright blue and it can be fawn, cream, or brown in color.
Yes, the purebred Italian Greyhound can have a blue fawn and white coat.
A blue Pit Bull is black at the K Locus and has 2 alleles of the recessive dilute gene at the D Locus. Dilute gene diluted black pigment to blue / gray. So a black Pit will be blue, a brindle will be blue brindle, fawn will have blue mask or shading, a black & tan will be blue & tan.
Though not always as it depends on the parents genetics it is typically possible. It would be called a blue fawn. Fawn coat with blue nose, eye rims, blue mask, ect.
"Blue-nose" is a fad street term for a blue dilute dog. Both the dilute blue gene and the "rednose" gene are simple recessives, caused by two entirely different genes, that "wash out" coat color, or "dilute" it. The blue gene dilutes black to gray, not just on the hair, but on skin as well, so a dilute blue dog will have a slate gray nose pad, lips and eyelids instead of black.
A blue nose pit and a red nose pit are like yellow labs and black labs. The same exact breed, just different coloration. So, nope, neither is better.
There are six standard "show" colors in the U.S.; Fawn, brindle, black, blue, mantle, and harlequin.If you include non standard colors there are at least 29 total color/marking combinations I can recall; piebald/plattenhund, merle, blue merle, red merle, blue mantle, fawn mantle, brindle mantle, fawn harlequin, brindle harlequin,blue harlequin (or porcelain), merle harlequin, blue merle harlequin, red merle harlequin, chocolate, chocolate mantle, chocolate merle, chocolate harlequin, blue masked fawn, chocolate masked fawn, merle masked fawn, blue brindle, blue brindle harlequin, and white.I'm not sure on different colors of piebalds, haven't seen one, but I imagine each color category is possible.
The parents of a fawn are called a Doe (female) or a Buck (male) thats for a White tail or mule deer if your talking bout an Elk or Caribou its a Calf and the parents a Cow and bull
Red Red Fawn Buckskin Black Seal Chocolate White Merle (not accepted by the registries but there are pure ones out there) And rarely blue fawn and blue. The APBT blue looks almost black because the dilute gene is appiled once to a black coat. It is bred on and applies multiple times so the bullies look a lighter blue. They can some in brindle of any of these colors. They can have any amount of white.
There is no way to guarantee that you will get a blue fawn pit bull. Even if both parent dogs are blue fawn pit bulls. A mother dog may have seven puppies and have all seven look totally different.