So, I’ve got a handful of little sable point/frosty does (one might be a frosted pearl, I’m waiting for a test litter from her) and I’ve noticed something strange. In winter all their little points get a lot clearer looking (accept possible frosted) but when the weather heats back up they start getting a lot of little bits of color on the rest of their coat. My youngest one in particular, she’s I believe a sable point marten although I’m not 100% on that, has gotten these little dark patches on her back. I can’t really take pictures right now as I’m expecting a litter from her and don’t want to upset her but they’re rather dark in comparison to her otherwise white fur.
The sable aka shaded allele <
c(chl)>
may be somewhat temperature-sensitive. I've noticed that very often sables get "blotchy" during a molt, and sometimes never return to the smooth, even color of their first prime coat, especially when the molt coincides with warm temperatures. However, since many of the C-series alleles are partially recessive, it could be that when a shaded allele is paired with a recessive himalayan allele, i.e. <
c(chl)c(h)>, the himi allele's temperature sensitivity may be the factor driving color development. Although, in the sables it seems to be reversed, in that the darker coats seem to be connected with warmer temperatures, the opposite of the himi's darkening points, plus sometimes smut, in cold temps.
Following are some examples of the wild color variations I've seen in sables while they're changing coats. These are sables, rather than sable points, but I've seen the same effect on sable points.
The first three photos are Dusky, a <
c(chl)c(h)> doe that molted mid-summer, so her coat grew in during some very warm weather. She ended up so dark she would have easily passed for a seal, except that I knew that genetically, she was not: her sire was a self black <
Cc(h)> and her dam was a sable point <
c(chl)c(h)>. Interestingly, her stray white hairs stayed consistent throughout all of her molts.
The fourth photo is her younger full sibling Dusty, so also <
c(chl)c(h)>, with a much more correct adult coat coming in in the cooler fall weather. Although I have noticed that sables do seem to have a tendency to continue to darken as they age, Dusty never got nearly as dark as his sister, and remained a pretty good example of sable into his third year. Perhaps it was a result of his molt timing, or something else?
My daughter's sable point Holland also shows dark patches on her back and sides. You can see them a bit in this photo, but I'll see if I can get some other pictures that are more illustrative.