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This
is one of the most common questions asked when
people breed their horses. This information
will shed some light on the subject but beware--
where there are horses, there are exceptions.
This discussion will only deal with the easily
identifiable genes, their are other genes that
modify the main ones.
First here are some terms you will need
to know when discussing genetics:
Genes: the DNA/genetic information
for a horse is coded on strands of protein found
in the nuclei of cells. A 'gene' is an actual
DNA sequence or ëspotí on these
strands that can be identified with a specific
characteristic, such as coat color.
Homozygous/Heterozygous: these
two terms relate to the gene pairs at a specific
location ('spot' or loci). If the genes are
homozygous, then they are the same. Heterozygous
means they are different. (Example, palominos
are always heterozygous for the cremello gene,
cremellos are always homozygous.)
Genotype: What the genes of
the horse are.
Phenotype: What the horse actually
looks like.
Read the definitions for genotype and phenotype
again. They are a very important part of understanding
why a horse can look one way, and throw something
completely unexpected.
All horses come with two basic coat
colors, Red (CC) and Black
(EE or Ee). Base Red coat color phenotypes
are Sorrel, Chestnut, Palomino, Cremello, Red
Roan and Red Dun. Base Black coat color phenotypes
are Bay, Brown, Black, Buckskin, Perlino, Dun,
Grullo, Roan and Blue Roan. (Grey will be discussed
later.) It is also very important to understand
that Red is recessive, (or masked) by the Black
gene. This is why two black parents will produce
Sorrel/Chestnut foals. You should never get
a horse in the black family if you breed two
horses in the red family together, no mater
what those grand parents looked like. However
the reverse is not true. Two black family parents
can produce both Red family and Black family
foals.
Genotypically, Sorrel and Chestnuts
look like this: ( aa, ee, CC, dd, rr,
gg ). Many registries try to separate
these two colors, but for this article we are
talking about the typical red to red-brown horse
with no black points and manes that vary from
almost black to off white (but not palomino).
Some Chestnuts could almost be black but the
difference is obvious when you look for black
points on the legs. Sorrel to Sorrel will always
produce chestnut/sorrel foal, and I might add
will never produce anything else. Genotypiclly
these horses are recessive for everything, and
when you mate recessives to recessives you will
always know the outcome because it will be recessive
genetically and phenotypically. (Genetically
the Sorrel/Chestnut gene is shown as CC in caps,
I
don't know why because it is a recessive-- one
of those darn exceptions.)
Black
horse geneticly are: ( aa,
E -, cc, dd, rr, gg ). The ' - ' means
it can be 'EE' or 'Ee' in this genetic spot.
Black is a color that has varying definitions
but here it will mean a horse that sheds black
two times a year, with no brown or red hairs
any where, even though they fade over the winter
or summer months. (Black is also one of those
colors affected by subtle genes that will not
be addressed here except for brown.)
Black
has one interesting trick. When a cremello gene
is added to a black horse, it is very hard to
tell. Genotypically the horse is aa, E - , C^cr
C, dd, rr, gg, but phenotypically the horse
stays Black, or a Smokey Black. Only resulting
offspring will show the cremello gene as a palomino
or buckskin foal. Foals can be born looking
black or charcoal grey and these foals will
eventually shed to black. Black x Black cross
can produce black or sorrel/chestnut foals.
It can also produce palomino foal if the cremello
gene is present (see palomino.) Black x Black
will never produce bay or brown if the horse
matches the black description mentioned above.
Brown horses are have the black gene and subtle
gene modifiers that cause bay and sorrel colored
spots on the muzzle and flank areas. They also
tend to fade to bay during the summer time.
Brown horses can produce black, brown and sorrel
(not addressing the cremello gene).
Homozygous Black horse will never have sorrel/chestnut
foals, and will produce black on sorrel/chestnut
mares with two black parents. Horses can be
homozygous for the black gene even though they
are not black; I have a Grullo tobiano stallion
that illustrates this. There is a direct red-factor
test to determine the genes, see the UC Davis
website.
All the rest of the coat colors are
additional genes that modify the above two colors
(with a few exceptions.)
Grey (aa, ee, cc, dd,
rr, G- ), this is a Sorrel/Chestnut
horse with the Grey gene) is the gene that dominates
everything eventually, and Grey is easy to identify
from a roan because a Grey foal is not born
grey. When they shed they start turning Grey
around the eyes and ears first. Roan horses
are born with white hairs mixed with the base
coat color and typically have no roan hairs
on the head or below the knees.
Palomino (and Cremello/Perlino):
(aa, ee, C^cr C, dd, rr, gg
) have one cremello gene turning a Sorrel/Chestnut
to palomino and having little or no effect on
a black horse in the absence of other gene actions.
Palomino x Palomino cross will produce palomino,
Sorrel/Chestnut and cremello foals. Palomino
foals are usually born a very light palomino
and then shed out darker, but every now and
then one is born a kind of faded Sorrel/Chestnut
color. These foals then shed out the golden
palomino check the roots of the mane within
two or three months of age. Perlinos and Cremellos
have two cremello genes and are also called
albino's. These horses are not lethal whites
and will not produce lethal whites unless they
have a paint/overo background. These horses
have light blue eyes that are photo sensitive
and I have come to the conclusion they don't
see quite as well as a normal horse, almost
like they were nearsighted (I own one and have
observed several others). Hearing seems to be
unaffected, and the foals appear normal and
carry a cremello gene, making them 100% palomino
and buckskin producers.
Bay (A - , E - , CC,
dd, rr, gg) is a black horse with a
gene that modifies the body to a dark red/brown
color. Bays always have black points, black
below the knees, black mane and tails. The agouti
(A,- ) gene is responsible for the modification
(and I refer to it as the bay modifier.) Bay
x Bay crosses can result in Bay, Brown, Black
and Sorrel/Chestnut foals. Bays typically are
born bay with light colored hair on the legs
that becomes black and when they shed out.
Buckskin (A -, E -
, C^cr C, dd, rr, gg) it should be
easy to tell now that a buckskin is a bay with
a cremello gene. It also shows how hard it is
to breed all three players, black, bay modifier,
and cremello gene to one foal. Buckskin is one
of the colors that show some of the subtle gene
actions. There are Smutty-buckskins, buttermilk-buckskins,
almost-Bay buckskins and all varieties in between.
I have not seen many buckskin foals, I assume
most are readily identifiable but contact a
longtime buckskin breeder if there is doubt.
Buckskin x Buckskin crosses result in Sorrel/Chestnut,
Palomino, Bay, Black, Buckskin, Cremello, Perlino,
and Brown foals. Buckskin-Duns
are addressed below.
Dun-factor (aa, ee,
CC, D - , rr, gg: this shows a Red Dun)
is a family of horses. All horses with a dun-factor
gene have a distinctive dorsal stripe down the
length of the back. Some horses have faint dorsal
or part dorsal but these do not carry the true
dun-factor gene. Dun factor is also usually
expressed at least some of the following: ear
bars and tips, face mask, cobwebing, leg
stripes, and neck and shoulder bars. Grullo
is dun-factor on a Black, Dun is dun-factor
on a Bay, Red Dun is dun-factor on a sorrel/chestnut.
Dun-factor can also be on a Grey horse, but
eventually this is covered by the Grey. Dun
factor can be present in a homozygous form,
and some horses throw only dun-factor foals.
Dun x Dun crosses (Bay with dun-factor) can
result in Black, Grullo, Bay, Dun, Sorrel, Red
Dun foals. Some foals are born with some dun-factor
characteristics (faint dorsal and leg stripes),
and these shed out within the first year. They
will not have the other characteristics of dun-factor.
Dun-factor foals are born yellowish, even Grullo,
and darken as they shed. (Horses born Charcoal-Grey
will shed to black.)
Buckskin-Duns (A -
, E - , C^cr C, D - , rr, gg) for this
article these horses have both types of dilution
gene, Dun-factor and Cremello. (Sometimes this
term refers to just duns who are coppery-buckskin
with a dorsal.) On sorrel mares these resulting
foals can be Sorrel (drat it!), Palomino, Buckskin,
Black, Bay, Brown, Grullo, Dun, Red Dun, and
are truly desirable horses for color
production.
Roans (aa, ee, CC,
dd, R - , gg, shows Red Roan) these
horses have a roan gene that turns Black to
Blue Roan, Bay to Roan, and Sorrel to Red Roan.
Now I will say some people switch around Red
Roan to include to Bay Roans, but as they are
different, I like to use the same naming pattern
as the Dun-Factors for consistency. Also I am
referring to the Roans that are true Roan, not
the horses that just happen to have some white
hairs in the flanks. Rubicano is confused with
true Roan. Rubicanos have a 'coon tail' of white
baring at the tail head and white hairs in the
flanks, some quite strongly. Go Man Go is an
excellent example of a horse registered Red
Roan, but his tail clearly shows the roaning
to be from the Rubicano gene.
The
table below is directly from the UC Davis website
at www.vgl.ucdavis.edu/~lvmillion
Genetic
Formulas and Color Definitions |
| Genetic
Formula |
Color |
| W |
White
(not addressed) |
| G |
Gray |
| E,
A, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto |
Bay |
| E,
aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto |
Black |
| ee,
aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto |
Red
(sorrel/chestnut) |
| E,
A, CCcr, dd, gg, ww, toto |
Buckskin |
| ee,
CCcr, dd, gg, ww, toto |
Palomino |
| CcrCcr |
Cremello |
| E,
A, CC, D, gg, ww, toto |
Buckskin
dun |
| E,
aa, CC, D, gg, ww, toto |
Mouse
dun (grullo) |
| ee,
CC, D, gg, ww, toto |
Red
dun |
| E,
A, CC, dd, gg, ww, TO |
Bay
tobiano |
| ee,
CC, D, gg, ww, TO |
Red
dun tobiano |
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