That looks like it might be a sable magpie , or maybe a broken sable magpie, since it's spotted instead of banded/striped. The nose marking and the pale parts on the back look like the sepia tones produced by the sable aka shaded allele <c(chl)>. The only hesitation I have is what appears to be orange coloration on the ears, which should not be able to be there if there is a sable allele in charge.Is my Mini Rex a Magpie?
Thank you. She doesn’t appear to have any orange on her.That looks like it might be a sable magpie or sable point magpie, or maybe a broken sable magpie, since it's spotted instead of banded/striped. The nose marking and the pale parts on the back look like the sepia tones produced by the sable aka shaded allele <c(chl)>. The only hesitation I have is what appears to be orange coloration on the ears, which should not be able to be there if there is a sable allele in charge.
If the color appearing on my monitor is inaccurate and the ears are actually a pale sepia rather than orange (light sepia can look a bit yellowed), the rabbit could be a broken sable, except there shouldn't be both gray and black spots on her back and ears. A broken sable could have both gray-brown and black coloration, but it would be in a shaded pattern rather than discrete spots of each all over the body. Discrete patches suggest harlequin, and a sable harlequin would be a magpie, since the sable <c(chl)> blocks expression of yellow pigment (pheomelanin)
Thank you, I cannot see her background, though.does she have shaded in her background at all? She looks broken to me but that face says something odd is going on.
I will.That pattern is called Dalmatian Rex in Europe, but the lighter grey patches would be a DQ. You could try to breed bicolour Dalmatian, or use her to breed Tricolour Dalmatian.
That makes it more likely that she's a broken sable magpie.Thank you. She doesn’t appear to have any orange on her.
That pattern is called Dalmatian Rex in Europe, but the lighter grey patches would be a DQ. You could try to breed bicolour Dalmatian, or use her to breed Tricolour Dalmatian.
Dalmatian, as I understand, is a particular pattern found on a broken colored rabbit. It is not recognized by the ARBA, and in the US would typically just be called "broken."I will.
Not sure of the EE standard (or standards in individual countries, which may differ) but here is the BRC one. As the Dalmatian was originally a European breed, the BRC standard will be very close to those in Europe.Question for @MsTemeraire: I somewhere got the impression that a nose butterfly or spine markings were not desirable in dalmatian rex. Can you say what the European standard calls for in this variety?
That's the rub - as far as I know you can't, unless you know for sure that the rabbit did NOT have a broken parent. Brokens tend to have spots/blankets, and magpies tend to have color running in longer patches/stripes, but when you combine them, those already iffy distinctions break down. If I see a broken colored rabbit with half a nose marking, or color on one ear and not the other, I think magpie, but I have seen normal brokens with those markings. I have never seen a broken with color on its feet, so if the rabbit does, I'd assume it's a magpie but not broken.Thank you @Alaska Satin for the explanation. How can I tell the difference between broken magpie and a broken?
Thanks for this, but I can't read it. It's very small, and when I zoom in, it becomes so blurry I can't make it out. But I'd love to be able to read it!Not sure of the EE standard (or standards in individual countries, which may differ) but here is the BRC one. As the Dalmatian was originally a European breed, the BRC standard will be very close to those in Europe.View attachment 42612
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