I have recently gotten a chocolate magpie holland lop and I am not sure what to breed with him to get more chocolate magpies. I have a Tri, chinchilla, and a Tort doe.
Unless one of your other rabbits carries chocolate, you won't get chocolate anything in the first generation. The ideal would be to breed him with another chocolate magpie. Second best would be a chocolate harlequin, or a black magpie. Unfortunately, unless there are hidden alleles at certain loci, none of the varieties you already have will be likely to make chocolate magpies in the first generation, but the tri and chinchilla are good bets to get chocolate magpies in the second generation, especially if you breed certain of their offspring together. I'd avoid the tort since she has two different recessive alleles that will make it harder to get a proper magpie in any color.
That's the short answer. If you're inclined to think about the genetics behind this...
There are alleles (different forms of genes) at four key loci (places on the gemone) needed to get chocolate magpie: agouti <
A_>, chocolate <
bb>, chinchilla <
c(chd)_>, and harlequin <
e(j)_>. A chocolate magpie is: <
A_ bb c(chd)_ D_ e(j)_>.
So, because a tricolor is a broken harlequin, you know she has the necessary components of agouti <
A_> and harlequin <
e(j)>. Depending on what the tricolor carries behind her dominant genes, there is a chance you could get chocolate magpies with her. A magpie is a chinchilla harlequin. Assuming your tri doe is black-based (black, orange and white), from breeding her to a choc magpie you'd expect to get more tricolors, and black/orange harlequins (plus other colors, both solid and broken, depending on what recessives she carries). If the tricolor doe
happens to carry hidden chocolate <
b> you might get chocolate harlequins, and if she
happens to carry a chinchilla <
c(chd)>allele, you might get magpies, and if she happens to carry
both, you'll see chocolate harlequins. Unfortunately, you might also get broken magpies (black and/or chocolate), which are tricky because you don't necessarily know that's what they are - both chinchilla and broken alleles produce patches of white, and although they
tend to produce white areas in different patterns, when you put them on the same rabbit it gets difficult to identify with certainty whether it's one or both of them.
Likewise, the chinchilla doe also has two of the four necessary alleles, the agouti <
A> and chinchilla <
c(chd)>. Bred with the chocolate magpie, you'd expect to get solid chinchillas and black magpies, again with other colors depending on her recessives. (If by chance she is homozygous for full extension <
EE>, you would probably not get magpies as <
E> generally overpowers <
e(j)>). If she
happens to carry chocolate <
b> behind her black <
B> and a hidden <
e(j)> or <
e>, it's possible she could produce chocolate magpies with the buck.
Chocolate <
b> is recessive to black <
B_>, so a rabbit needs two copies to appear chocolate. One of your does might carry chocolate, in which case that's the one to breed him with to set chocolate as your base color. Once you get chocolates, you'll never get another black unless you introduce it by breeding to a black-based rabbit (black can't hide).
Chinchilla <
c(chd)> prevents expression of most or all orange/yellow pigments. It is a medium-level recessive allele, meaning it's recessive to full-color <
C> but dominant or partially dominant to some other alleles (sable/shaded <
c(chl)>, himalayan <
c(h)> and REW <
c>). It can easily hide, so if you see chinchillas, magpies or ermines in a rabbit's pedigree, there is a decent chance the rabbit might carry it. Because it's in the middle, it's not as easy to set as chocolate; once you get chinchillas you can still have one of the lower-ranking alleles pop up (but you won't get full-color).
Harlequin <
e(j)> is a trickier gene since it needs "help" expressing itself properly, but it can show up in weird ways if it doesn't have the ideal help. A proper harlequin is an agouti <
A_>, so self-colored rabbits (which are all recessive <
aa>) or otters (which are <
a(t)a(t)> or <
a(t)a>) are not helpful. You only need one copy of agouti <
A> though, and both your tri and chinchilla does have at least one copy.
The tort doe, assuming she's a black tort, is a much longer shot, since she'd have to carry all four hidden alleles (and harlequin doesn't tend to hide very well, so if she's a correct tort, you can feel fairly certain that's not lurking - though it
is possible). She will also give all of her bunnies recessive self and non-extension alleles, which will mess up your harlequins and magpies down the road.