Thought I should add. The EAP SOP lists the colour of the last serama pullet as gold wheaten, and the first serama pullet as creamy wheat. I really don't know anything about colour genetics, so I'd greatly appreciate any help
I would like some help with figuring out what these serama colours could produce. The serama boy (picture one) has bred with this mix breed girl (picture two) and produced these chicks (photos three and four), if that helps you come up with potential genes the boy is carrying. So now, what could...
OK I'm fine with that, and it does make sense. I was mostly fearing he was a mix, and not a pure aseel. But since you're telling me one parent could be single combed and the other pea, then he's most likely pure. Thank you!
I have made a similar post in a different thread, but I can find it so here it goes. So I have this aseel stag. Unlike what an aseel *should* look like, he has wattles. So, what would you consider his comb type to be, and what kind of comb did the parents have to have in order for him to end up...
Ugh its so complex but so interesting! Thank you for your help, I might have been keeping chickens for quite some time, but you can learn something new every day, and learning about chicken genetics make me feel like a beginner all over again!
OK so I would like to learn some more things about comb genetics. Will mixing two different comb types lead to a "hybrid" comb, and which gene determines the comb type