Most of the time it doesn't matter what color the parents are they can have all colors. With yellow on yellow you will get predominantly yellow, and same with the "lemon" lab also.
The puppies will vary in appearance, but likely have a mix of traits from both breeds such as a golden retriever's longer coat and a lab's shorter coat. They may have a color range from yellow to golden, with potential for chocolate or black accents depending on the genetic influence from the grandparents.
Yes. uhhh...no my friend.... 2 yellows will only have yellows and/or dudleys if the parents are chocolate factored.... why? because the parents are both yellow labs, they carry the ee alleles, therefore, they both can only pass on "e" to their offspring making all the offspring "ee" (yellow labs)....in order to be a black lab, they have to have at least 1 "B" and one "E" which the yellow labs do not have, so you'd have to bred a yellow with a chocolate or black lab to be able to get some black pups....hope this helps
A yellow lab and a Malamute mix can produce a variety of puppies with traits from both breeds. These puppies may inherit the size and strength of a Malamute along with the friendly and outgoing nature of a Labrador Retriever. It's important to consider potential health issues and grooming needs that could arise in mixed-breed puppies.
There are hundreds of different types of dogs! Labs, chihuahuas, boxers, great danes, yorkie, poodle, retrievers, mastives, terriers.....and many many more....than you go international. Type in on the computer types of dogs and you will get tons of sites to go to! Hope this helps!
If the female dog is a mix breed but the male is a purebred lab, the puppies would be considered a mix of the two breeds. The puppies will inherit characteristics from both parents, making them a mix breed.
Yes
Um, no. One parent has to be a yellow Lab to do that. Actually, you are wrong. A chocolate and a black lab can have yellow puppies. I have had my chocolate female bred with a black male and they had all 3 colors. In fact, she even had a white male which white labs are rare.
A mutt
silver is just a diluted chocolate gene.so to answer the question chocolate!
Chocolate lab puppies are not much different to raise than another kind of puppy. You need lots of puppy chow, water, newspapers for messes, love, and patience.
You never know - could be golden/yellow, chocolate, or even black. These are two different dog breeds.
6 to 8
"Do NOT breed a yellow and a chocolate. You will get what are called "dudleys". They will have no black pigmentation, so a pink nose, pink or yellow eyes, pink paw pads, etc. A chocolate and a yellow are incapable of having a black puppy, as neither carry a dominant black gene. " Whoever said that obviously doesn't know about Labrador genetics. My Chocolate lab and yellow father had 2 black puppies in their litter 4 days ago. There are TWO genes that determine labrador colour. One gene detemines the chocolate/black colour, one gene determines yellow colouring. In the each gene, there two alleles, if you like. Correctly, a chocolate lab can not carry the black gene as it is dominant and the chocolate gene is ressessive. The chocolate dog has to have 2 chocolate alleles. However, the yellow colouring gene is irrespective of the chocolate/black gene. If that gene has two ressessive yellow alleles, the dog WILL be yellow, regardless if it carries 1 or 2 black alleles in the first chocolate/black gene. If you don't yunderstand that, you do not have the knowledge to answer such a question and give people wrong advice. And my Lolas puppies are beautiful, by the way.
it depends on what type of dog you breed your chocolate lab with.
a purebred dog or a mix very fun dogs and i think a puppy for her to grow up with that's the best kind i think a black nose curve or a chocolate lab i have those breeds of those dogs 1 is not a puppy Dixie is chocolate lab is 3 years old and Cowboy is 9 moths old black nose curve mix best kind but make sure there puppies
The puppies would be labs (like the mom and dad) ,but the color or colors would depend entirely on which color genes they received from each parent. The black color is dominant; the possibilities for a black puppy are EEBB, EEBb,EeBB, or EeBb. The possibilities for a yellow puppy are eeBB, eeBb, or eebb. Both EEbb and Eebb would produce a chocolate lab. So, to be yellow, the puppy must receive the 'e' gene from both parents, and to be chocolate, the puppy must have received the 'b' gene from both parents--any other combination will produce a black puppy. It should be noted that the combination of eebb will always produce a dog that is yellow, but that has chocolate pigmentation around its eye rims, and on its nose. This is not currently an 'accepted' color for registration with the AKC. Wait what would the majority of the puppies be? Black, yellow, or chocolate? There is also times where is a greyish color, but its rare. We had two black labs stay with us for several months. The female had 9 puppies, 5 were yellow labs, 4 were black, both parents were black labs.
up to 10 puppies