emma,vodka, secret,ruby,garnet emma,vodka, secret
Paddy , Chester , Viney , Joey, Jojo, Josie, Caesar, Jessica, Luke.
pony stallion mare nag mule donkey
If either horse is homozygous for roan the foal will be roan, if both are heterozygous there is a 75% chance that the foal will be roan. If by strawberry roan you mean the stallion is a bay roan as opposed to a chestnut roan, we can surmise that the stallion is Rn-A-E- The mare is Rn-aaE- The base color of the foal, without regard to whether it is roan is as follows If the stallion or mare is EE at the extension site they will produce either a bay or black foal...since the stallion is bay he could be AA (only bay foals) or Aa which will produce 50-50 bay or black with this mare. If both the mare and the stallion are Ee at the extension site there is a 25% chance of a chestnut foal.
Usually the darker color will dominate. But sometimes the genes of the parents can overpower the darker color. You really can not be sure. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- It really depends on whether the black horse is homozygous (EE) or heterozygous (Ee). Horses are born with a base color from each parent. E represents black and e represents red. Black is dominate over red. If you get two red genes (ee) you always end up with a chestnut. If you get one or two black genes (Ee/EE) you end up with a black horse as long as you don't have agouti (A-Bay). So if you have a black horse with Ee bred to a chestnut horse ee, you have a 50/50 chance of getting a chestnut. If you breed a black horse with EE to a chestnut horse ee, you have a 100% chance of a black horse because they black (E) gene is dominate. Hope that clarifies it :) Fuangel29
A good name for a chestnut filly might be Firefly or Fire or Easy Breeze. Most chestnut fillies tend to be a little fiery, depending on the breed, so giving her a fiery name would be fun. You could also call her Ruby or Scarlet or Leala.
it is not possible to have a grey horse unless one of the parents is grey. they must have it to thow it.
Long Jump, Lannie, Lane, Long Legged Lucy, Leepster, Lep, etc.
ImagineDiscoverGloryDanteFirefootIrresistablePerfectionCandlelightQuickstepWhiskeyMagical
You should name him after a Country Rockstar. For example, Kenny Chesney.
Palomino
an old one
any name that u like! spend time with your horse then pick a name!
a good name for a shetland pony is sheba which is from the Hebrew origin it means promise or oath.
Well it would depend honestly. I typically like to combine the parents names, or grandparents, it depends on the individual horse.
23.44% -Grullo Roan23.44% -Grullo23.44% -Blue Roan23.44% -Black1.56% -Red Dun Roan1.56% -Red Dun1.56% -Chestnut Roan1.56% -Chestnut
pony stallion mare nag mule donkey
The foal could be a number of colors. Based on the description the stallion is either aaEe or aaEE. The mare is --ee (as her genetics at the agouti site is unknown). Research on the color of her parents and grandparents may be an indicator of the alleles at the agouti site. If the stallion is aaEe there is a 50% chance that the foal will be chestnut/sorrel. If the stallion is aaEE there will be no possibility of chestnut, however the resulting foal will be determined by the alleles that the mare has at the agouti site...which are currently unknown. If she has a single black parent, there is a 50% chance that the foal will be black (if the stallion is aaEE and a 25% chance of a black foal if the stallion is aaEe. Since black true black at the agouti site is homozygous recessive...it will be the mare's genetics at the agouti site that will determine the color of any non-chestnut foal.
If either horse is homozygous for roan the foal will be roan, if both are heterozygous there is a 75% chance that the foal will be roan. If by strawberry roan you mean the stallion is a bay roan as opposed to a chestnut roan, we can surmise that the stallion is Rn-A-E- The mare is Rn-aaE- The base color of the foal, without regard to whether it is roan is as follows If the stallion or mare is EE at the extension site they will produce either a bay or black foal...since the stallion is bay he could be AA (only bay foals) or Aa which will produce 50-50 bay or black with this mare. If both the mare and the stallion are Ee at the extension site there is a 25% chance of a chestnut foal.