Just picked up this doe at an auction to screw with my color genetics for fun. She looks like a frosty/ermine to me, what does the base color look like? Chocolate or sable? Can you have a sable frosty?
View attachment 43858View attachment 43859you could have a chocolate chinchilla or a chocolate frosty(ermine) ... or? it will be interesting to see what the others say. I noticed you like the sables like I do.
Thanks for the call-out, @MckatieJust picked up this doe at an auction to screw with my color genetics for fun. She looks like a frosty/ermine to me, what does the base color look like? Chocolate or sable? Can you have a sable frosty?
I thought the ears were definitely a different colour on my screen as wellThanks for the call-out, @Mckatie
She's pretty. Yeah, I like calling her sable frosty aka sable ermine. You can definitely have both - the sable <c(chl)> is on the C locus, and the ermine/frosty is non-extension <ee> coming from alleles at the E locus. So if she's a sable frosty, she would be <A_B_c(chl)_D_ee>.
I'd go with sable rather than chocolate because the lacing on her ears - where I tend to go for base color reference - does not look at all like chocolate on my screen; it looks sepia.
Thanks for the call-out, @Mckatie
She's pretty. Yeah, I like calling her sable frosty aka sable ermine. You can definitely have both - the sable <c(chl)> is on the C locus, and the ermine/frosty is non-extension <ee> coming from alleles at the E locus. So if she's a sable frosty, she would be <A_B_c(chl)_D_ee>.
I'd go with sable rather than chocolate because the lacing on her ears - where I tend to go for base color reference - does not look at all like chocolate on my screen; it looks sepia.
On my screen, the whole the ear does look blue-ish, but if I look only at the tip, it looks sepia...but as you point out, screens each can have their own versions of colors.I thought the ears were definitely a different colour on my screen as well
But more gray/blue. However, I'm on my phone. Are there many notable differences between chocolate and sable? I posted pictures of the kits (another post) and I thought they might be chocolate sable .
You are welcome!
Ermine, as I understand it, is usually considered non-extension chinchilla c(chd)_ + ee. However, it can also be c(chl)_ + ee, which would technically be non-extension sable chinchilla. The wrinkle there is that sable chinchilla isn't genetically a chinchilla: correctly, it's a sable agouti, since if it had a more dominant chinchilla c(chd), the c(chl) would not be expressed.P.S. so is ermine is detemined by chl with ee?
That's understandable .On my screen, the whole the ear does look blue-ish, but if I look only at the tip, it looks sepia...but as you point out, screens each can have their own versions of colors.
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The fur tipping on the forehead has that not-quite-black color as well, which could make you think chocolate - but again, the tip doesn't look chocolate.
For me, some colors are recognizable mostly by the process of elimination.
Ermine, as I understand it, is usually considered non-extension chinchilla c(chd)_ + ee. However, it can also be c(chl)_ + ee, which would technically be non-extension sable chinchilla. The wrinkle there is that sable chinchilla isn't genetically a chinchilla: correctly, it's a sable agouti, since if it had a more dominant chinchilla c(chd), the c(chl) would not be expressed.
I suspect this wrinkle came about because because both chinchilla c(chd) and sable c(chl) block yellow-based pigments, which in an agouti means dark bands + pearl bands. In fact the c(chl) nomenclature refers to the sable allele's original moniker - "chinchilla light." It's just that while chinchilla c(chd) generally affects only the yellow pigments, sable c(chl) also affects the expression of the dark bands, mellowing them out from black to sepia. Interestingly, yet lower on the C scale, himalayan c(h) also has this effect on the dark pigment. In breeds that recognize the himalayan variety, this is implicitly acknowledged in many of their standards, which call for color, e.g. "as near black as possible" (Californian), "dark sepia, to appear black" (Satin), or "as dark sepia as possible" (Rex).
I have an ongoing discussion with a friend who breeds Czech Frosties about the issue of ermine being chin- vs sable-based. Czech Frosties are called frosty/ermine, and from what I gather from breeders they're assumed to be non-extension chins; but it seems to my eye their "veil" looks more sepia than black. When you get down to that little of color in the coat, though, it can be pretty hard to discern the difference. Unfortunately, she's less obsessive about genetics than I am and isn't interested in experimentally out-crossing her (very expensive and rare) Czech Frosties to see what's under the covers.
Frosties, being agouti (whether chinchilla- or sable-based), will have white bellies...however, it seems to me that they should still have a darker undercolor there. Here's the belly of a blue chinchilla, which shows the undercolor of an agouti:Thanks! I have 3 frosties at my house @ around 7- 8 months. 2 bucks and a doe. I went and looked at their coats and ears. The ears did in fact look sepia on 2. I didn't look at their bellies, but I believe they are white/cream. I do not recall ever seeing a non white belly on my frosties.
Not sure how much variety you'll get, since they are both non-extension <ee> and neither have alleles that will allow yellow-based pigments to express. You'll get frosted and pointed, maybe REW or himi.I am interested in breeding the one Frostie, Smoke to one or both of my sable point does. There's a lovely chance at variety.
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