Dominant & Recessive Genetics | Basic Chicken Genetics Pt. 1
Вставка
- Опубліковано 24 лип 2021
- This video is the first part of a long series explaining chicken genetics. This first video is focusing on the relationship between Dominant and Recessive Genes.
View Part 2 on Incomplete Dominance and Co-Dominance here - • Incomplete Dominance &...
Feel free to contact me if you ever have any questions via the following methods. Thank you so much for watching! 😁
Email: cedarshadefarmnj@gmail.com
Instagram: / cedarshadefarmnj
Facebook: / cedarshade.farm.10
Facebook Page: / cedarshadefarmnj
Website: cedarshadefarmnj.wixsite.com/... - Домашні улюбленці та дикі тварини
You are awesome,,, thank you. I breed Heritage Barred Rock that are mixed with Generations years ago also foul that I made from both continents of the world
This video was so useful in diving the genetics of my favorite mixed breed rooster, I thought he was a silkie and Orpington but now I know he’s likely got no silkie in him at all. I’m gonna watch all your chicken genetics videos- this is FASCINATING and easy to understand! THANK YOU!
Thank you!! I’m so glad they were helpful!!
Just found your channel. New subscriber here. Awesome videos.
Thank you so much! 😊 Glad you could find them useful, let me know if you ever have any questions!
Awesome information! 😉
I just found your channel
Thank you
Very much enjoyed it greatly Thanks again for teaching
I am so glad you enjoyed, thank you for the kind words!
Great explanation! Thank you!!!
Thank you, so glad you enjoyed it!
You are so underrated!
Very informative, thanks for sharing.
Thank you, so glad you liked it!!
I love the info and the smooth explainatiin
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it! 😄
@@CedarShadeFarm can you make a video on beard gene.
New sub here .
Thank you for sharing your knowledge
Thanks so much for watching, hope it could be of use! 🙂
This is excellent information! Where is the next video?
Thank you so much! Part 2 is on Incomplete Dominance and Co-Dominance. 😁 Here is Part 2:
ua-cam.com/video/5u8QmoLe3C0/v-deo.html
Star!!
Brown eyed parents shouldn't have blue eyed children but my parents had 3 out of 6 , that how I learned this my mom explained this to me when I was vary small .
Recessive genes can sneak up on you lol
I would like to use this video as part of an online poultry class that I am creating. Could I have your permission to use this video as well as the other videos as part of this class.
Just received your FB message! I would be honored! Thank you so much! 😊
👍
Thank you for the video. I plan to share with my 4-H poultry group. Thank you in advance. Side note- What breed is your BBS ?
Thank you! Glad it could help! 😁 And for this video, the breed featured in Blue, Black and Splash were Andalusians. 🙂 Also have that color in Silkies but may not have when the video was made. If you need additional pictures or information feel free to message me and I’d be happy to share some! 😊
@@CedarShadeFarm that’s what I was going to guess. I have Silverudd’s Blue and they look very similar 💙
Hi . How r u? I have white heavey cochin, black , blue and only splash female . I need splash chicks from them. Which male should I pair with my splash female to get the result in molted or splash Thanks . Love from pakistan.
Hi! I responded to your question on FB but figured I'd answer here too in case anybody had the same question. 😊 Personally, I would go with the blue male provided he is equal in type to the black male. :) Blue X Splash = 50% Blue, 50% Splash. Black X Splash = 100% Blue. (And in case you were wondering, Blue X Blue = 50% Blue, 25% Black, 25% Splash). :)
As for the white, it depends on whether or not the male is dominant white or recessive white. :)
If recessive white, when bred to the Splash he would make 100% Blue split to Recessive white. (These birds would look blue in appearance). If these Blue split to recessive white (gene symbol: c, gene symbol for absence of recessive white: C+) were bred back to the recessive white, the offspring would be 25% c/c, Bl+/Bl+, 25% c/c Bl+/bl, 25% C+/c, Bl+/Bl+, 25% C+/c, Bl+/bl. To translate, 25% would look recessive white, but would be hiding black (recessive white covers everything, although occasionally some red leakage could pop through if the bird has gold). 25% would look recessive white but would hide blue. 25% would look black but carry one gene for recessive white, and 25% would look blue but carry one gene for recessive white.
If the white is dominant white, all offspring would be Blue Paint. :) (Like normal paint, but the black (eumelanin) would be diluted to blue instead of black). 😊
As for mottled, the mottled gene (recessive, gene symbol: mo, gene symbol for absence of mottling: Mo+) is completely separate and would have to be introduced. :) Mottled X Black would give 100% Blacks split to mo. Mottled X Blue would give 50% blues split to mo and 50% blacks split to mo. Mottled X Splash would give 100% blue split to mo. None would show mottling, except perhaps a patch here or there in juvenile plumage that would molt out by adulthood. If you bred a blue split to mottled back to the mottled, you would get 25% blue split to mottled, 25% black split to mottled, 25% blue mottled and 25% black mottled. Black split to mottled X mottled would give 50% black split to mottled, 50% mottled. Splash split to Mottled X mottled would give 50% blue split to mottled and 50% blue mottled. If avoidable, personally I wouldn't try to make splash mottleds, but it's up to you. Mottled can look very striking on a blue or black bird though! 😍
I hope all this helps and you could find your answer here. :) If you (or anybody else 😊) have any other questions, please don't hesitate to ask! For more information, this video covers the genetics of Blue/Black/Splash (BBS) breeding and Paint breeding. :)
ua-cam.com/video/5u8QmoLe3C0/v-deo.html
so how do you know one chicken is dominant or recessive??
Do baby chiks get some geens from the parents of they're parents i mean grandparents lets say black rooster with a black hen is there a chance to get some other colors out of they're babies ?
Nope! 🙂 A chick gets all their genes from their parents. Their parents got their genes from their parents, and so on.
Now, a chick’s parent may be carrying a recessive gene they got from their parents that they pass onto the chick, but those genes still only come from a chick’s parents. 🙂
Where you able to finish all 5 parts.
I haven’t yet! Always a work in progress. 😅 I’m working on the e-series now, then silver/gold.
I have a large rhode island red rooster and four brahma females..is there.a chance i can get large brahma chicks from this crossing
Hey there! Because these are two different breeds (Rhode Island and Brahma), by mixing them, you won't have any purebred chicks, they will be mutts. Are you asking about what color they'll be? 🙂
@@CedarShadeFarmwhat about Male jungle fowl and ayam cimani Hen
How would be they look