The colour. Chickens come in all sorts of breeds and colours. In most cases, you cannot tell what the breed is just by colour. You need several breed identifier "markers" to tell what breed it is other than just colour.
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.
Incomplete dominance occurs when the offspring's phenotype is a blend of the parents' traits, such as when a red flower and a white flower produce pink offspring. Codominance, on the other hand, results in both parental traits being expressed equally in the offspring, like when a black chicken and a white chicken produce offspring with both black and white feathers.
Black chickens like white chickens and white chickens like black chickens.
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.
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.
Not sure of the current going rate but in the "old days" a black chicken was 5/7ths the cost of a white chicken.
No. But there is torchic/combusken.
Colonel Sanders was white......
ones brown ones white
Both alleles for feather color are dominant.
Phasianidae, and is classified as Gallus gallus
The offspring will likely be a mix of black and white feathers, as erminette coloring is a pattern that combines both black and white. The specific distribution of colors will depend on the genetics of the parent chickens.