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for howrse: Isabella.
Answer
In real life, the color is cremello. See Related Links for a picture.
for howrse it is Isabella It is not a palomino at all but a cremello. A palomino is a chestnut horse with a single dilution gene. Instead of having a reddish-brown body, mane and tail it has a golden body and a white mane and tail. A cremello is a chestnut with two dilution genes. It has a very pale gold body and a white mane and tail. Bays and blacks also have dilutes and double dilutes - bay, buckskin, perlino and black, grey, smokey cream.
You could get either a palomino or a chestnut. Since a palomino is a diluted chestnut, and a chestnut has no dilution genes, it will balance out the foal's genes so that it could be either color! Good Luck!
In the wild, the same as every other horses! palaminos originate from the North American plains so their habitat would be a sandy and grassy sort of environment with big water hoels. Ever seen Spirit? (the film) it looks a bit like that. Same sort of environment as American Buffalo as well.
A color of a lions fur is very pale orange hex color is ffe8c1
Answer: The palomino color is a recessive gene, so it needs one from each parent. The best odds to get a palomino are breeding two together. Answer: Palomino is not recessive, but an incomplete dominant. Only ONE Creme gene (written as n/Cr) needs to be present in order for the horse to appear as palomino. If the horse had the creme gene from BOTH parents, it would not be a palomino at all, but an almost-white CREMELLO. This is written genetically as Cr/Cr (a creme gene from each parent). In fact breeding Palomino to Palomino gives EXACTLY the same chance of palomino as breeding Chestnut to Palomino - two chances out of four. Palomino x Palomino gives: 1 Cremello; 2 Palomino; 1 Chestnut/Sorrel. Chestnut x Palomino gives: 2 Palomino; 2 Chestnut/Sorrel Chestnut x Cremello gives: 4 out of 4 palominos, however: Cremellos can suffer from terrible sunburn and eye disorders. For humane reasons, therefore, it is often recommended that the Palomino x Chestnut formula be used for breeding palominos. (end of interruption) But a horse with E/e, Siver Gene, Cream Gene, Agouti can indeed have a Palomino-color, but is not a true Palomino. The black color is diluted by the Silver Gene, also by the Agouti Gene and Cream Gene, the horse will have a very light brown-gold color with blonde manes, just like a true Palomino. The more color modification genes a black horse (E/E or E/e) carries, the outcome will be an exception. From the outside one can not distinquish a horse like that from a true Palomino, only gene testing will give an answer, even so: the horse still carries a Cream Gene, just like a Polomino, but the horse basic color is not sorrel. This happens a lot. So normally a Palomino horse is e/e (sorrel) with a Cream Gene. But a horse with E/e, and Silver Gene, and Cream Gene And Agouti, will not be Smokey black, but will have a much lighter brownish, gold brown color like a Palomino, this because of the extra color modification genes the horse carries. Answer: A palomino is the result of a (1)cream gene acting on a sorrel/red (ee aa/Aa/AA) horse. 2 creams on sorrel/red horse result in a cremello. 1 cream on a bay horse results in a buckskin, 2 creams a perlino. The cream gene is not recessive. It is an incomplete dominant. Meaning that 1 copy of the gene lightens color some but 2 copies lightens color more. 2 palominos bred together will produce 25% sorrel/red 50% palomino 25% cremello offspring. The best way to produce palomino is to breed a cremello and a sorrel together. This will produce 100% palomino offspring. A horse that is Ee and has agouti is bay. If it has a cream gene it will lighten the horses coat and the resulting color is called buckskin. A silver gene only lightens black hair. It will lighten the mane, tail and legs SOME but usually not completely. It will look like a regular buckskin with "highlights." The mane a tail often get darker with age. It would take a person that has very little knowledge about coat colors to think the horse looked like a palomino. Answer: It could look like a palomino - since Silver (Z) could lighten the black mane and tail - but since silver does not lighten the coat as much as the mane and tail, the legs would be dark, like a red dun. That's how you could tell it's not a true palomino. I have found that the presence of TWO dilution genes can cause a double dilute effect, even though the genes are unrelated (dun, silver, champagne, creme, etc). I have a chestnut based Silver/Champagne that appears as a cremello without the blue eyes She has no creme gene at all.
Palomino is the color (Not a true breed) They range from very pale almost cream colored called Isabell to a nearly chocolate color.
for howrse it is Isabella It is not a palomino at all but a cremello. A palomino is a chestnut horse with a single dilution gene. Instead of having a reddish-brown body, mane and tail it has a golden body and a white mane and tail. A cremello is a chestnut with two dilution genes. It has a very pale gold body and a white mane and tail. Bays and blacks also have dilutes and double dilutes - bay, buckskin, perlino and black, grey, smokey cream.
You could get either a palomino or a chestnut. Since a palomino is a diluted chestnut, and a chestnut has no dilution genes, it will balance out the foal's genes so that it could be either color! Good Luck!
It is a very pale rose.
Palomino is strictly a color and not a breed. Palominos can range from a very dark chocolate type of brown to a very pale almost cream colored horse. The mane and tail may be Flaxen (white or yellow-ish) or it can have some silver hairs mixed in. Any breed that carries both the red (chestnut) gene and the cream modifier can have palominos.
(pale is used to mean lighter in color)My new dress is very PALE in color, a lighter blue than the others.When he saw the tornado coming, his face went PALE and he ran to the shelter.
In the wild, the same as every other horses! palaminos originate from the North American plains so their habitat would be a sandy and grassy sort of environment with big water hoels. Ever seen Spirit? (the film) it looks a bit like that. Same sort of environment as American Buffalo as well.
The palomino coat is ranges from light to dark gold, with a white mane and tail. Very light palominos are called cremello (see Related Links for pictures). The color is caused by an allele of the cream gene, a dilution of chestnut.
A palomino's coat can get very very very shiny if you take alot of care into it.
The palomino is a breed and a color. The breed just has certain rules the horse must follow. like the parents must be palomino, and the horse must be a certain shade of gold, ect. The palomino as a color is just a golden color with a white mane and tail and dark skin, versus light pink skin, which would classify the horse as a champagne.
Relatively, yes. The palomino coat color is a very specific genetic combination, although there are breeders who specialize in crossing the proper parent stock to maximize the possibility of getting a palomino foal.
Jasmine is usually considered a light purple.