Removing tag, this was a salvo in a heated discussion over the white gene on the talk page, not appropriate to slap this tag on the entire article. |
161.7.2.160 (talk) Creating intro with the basics, adding a source, editing for better flow-- I hope! |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
:''For less technical information on horse colors generally, see [[ |
:''For less technical information on horse colors generally, see [[Equine coat color]] |
||
⚫ | |||
'''Equine coat color genetics''' determine a [[horse]]'s coat color. All horses begin [[genetics|genetically]] with a base coat of "red" ([[Chestnut (coat)|chestnut]]) or "black."<ref name="Champagne">"Genetics of Champagne Coloring." ''The Horse'' online edition, accessed May 31, 2007 at http://www.thehorse.com/viewarticle.aspx?ID=9686</ref> Then, additional [[allele]]s or "modifiers" act upon the base colors to create all other [[equine coat color]]s. This base color is designated as "e" for the [[recessive gene|recessive]] red [[allele]] and "E" for the [[dominant gene|dominant]] black allele. |
|||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
Genes appear in sets of two, with each individual gene being called an [[allele]].<ref name="Champagne"/> When a gene set contains two copies of the same allele, it is called [[homozygous]]. When it has two different alleles, it is [[heterozygous]]. For a [[recessive gene]] to be expressed, it must be [[homozygous]], but a [[dominant gene]] will be expressed if it is [[heterozygous]] or homozygous. The difference is that a horse with a homozygous dominant gene will always pass it on to their offspring, while a horse with a heterozygous dominant will statistically only pass on the gene 50% of the time. |
|||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
The terms '''Alleles''' and '''Modifiers''' are used interchangeably in this article. |
|||
⚫ | There are currently two major theories of equine coat color genetics: those based on the work of the late Dr. Ann Bowling of the [[University of California, Davis]] and of Dr. Phillip Sponenberg of [[Virginia Polytechnic Institute]]. These theories overlap, and have more similarities than differences. |
||
The terms '''Alleles''' and '''Modifiers''' are used interchangeably in this article. An allele identified with a capital letter is a [[dominant gene]], one identified with a lower-case letter is a [[recessive gene]]. |
|||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
== Alleles and effects == |
== Alleles and effects == |
||
Line 17: | Line 21: | ||
|'''Alleles''' |
|'''Alleles''' |
||
|'''Effect of combined pairs of alleles''' |
|'''Effect of combined pairs of alleles''' |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |'''''GG''''' or '''''Gg''''': Horse shows progressive silvering with age to white or flea-bitten, but is born a non-gray color. Pigment is always present in skin and eyes at all stages of silvering. [[Gray (horse)|Gray]] horses range from white to dark gray depending on the proportion of white hairs in the coat |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|E |
|E |
||
|''E''<br>''e'' |
|''E''<br>''e'' |
||
|'''''EE''''' or '''''Ee''''': Horse forms [[Black (horse)|black]] pigment in skin and hair |
|'''''EE''''' or '''''Ee''''': Horse forms [[Black (horse)|black]] pigment in skin and hair.<br>'''''ee''''': Horse is [[chestnut (coat)|chestnut]], it has black pigment in skin, but red pigment in hair. |
||
White, gray, agouti, roaning, pattern (spotting) and dilution genes will all modify both red and black. |
|||
|- |
|- |
||
|E+ also noted as Ed. |
|E+ also noted as Ed. |
||
Line 41: | Line 34: | ||
|A |
|A |
||
|''A''<br>''a'' |
|''A''<br>''a'' |
||
|'''Agouti |
|'''Agouti''': Acts on "E" to restrict [[eumelanin]], or black pigment, to "points," allowing red coat color to show on body. Has no visible effect on "e" or red, as there is no black pigment to restrict.<br>'''''AA''''' or '''''Aa''''' horse is a [[Bay (horse)|Bay]], black hair shows only in points pattern (usually [[mane (horse)|mane]], tail, legs, sometimes tips of ears).<br>'''''aa''''': No agouti gene. If horse has E allele, then horse will be uniformly black. |
||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |'''''GG''''' or '''''Gg''''': [[Gray (horse)|gray]] gene. Horse shows progressive silvering with age to white or flea-bitten, but is born a non-gray color. Pigment is always present in skin and eyes at all stages of silvering. [[Gray (horse)|Gray]] horses range from white to dark gray depending on age and the proportion of white hairs in the coat. Horses' coats gray in a manner similar to graying in human hair.<br>'''''gg''''': Horse does not gray with aging. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|Cr |
|Cr |
||
|''Cr''<br>''cr'' |
|''Cr''<br>''cr'' |
||
|''' |
|'''Cream gene''' The [[cream gene]] is an [[dominance relationship|incomplete dominant]]. |
||
<blockquote> 1) '''''crcr''''': No dilution factor, horse is fully pigmented.<BR> 2) '''''Crcr''''': Single [[dilution gene|dilution]] factor, results in [[Palomino]], [[Buckskin]] or [[Smoky Black]]. Red pigment is diluted to gold with cream to white mane and tail; black pigment is not visibly altered on |
<blockquote> 1) '''''crcr''''': No dilution factor, horse is fully pigmented.<BR> 2) '''''Crcr''''': Single [[dilution gene|dilution]] factor, results in [[Palomino]], [[Buckskin]] or [[Smoky Black]]. Red pigment is diluted to gold with cream to white mane and tail; black pigment is not visibly altered on black points or black horses, though genetic testing can reveal "smoky black" coloration.</blockquote> |
||
3) '''''CrCr''''' [[Cremello]] or [[Perlino]]: Double dilution factor. Red pigment is diluted to a pale cream. Black pigment is diluted to a reddish shade. Skin and eye color are also diluted, and blue eyes are common with double diluted [[cream gene|creams]]. </blockquote> |
3) '''''CrCr''''' [[Cremello]] or [[Perlino]]: Double dilution factor. Red pigment is diluted to a pale cream. Black pigment is diluted to a reddish shade. Skin and eye color are also diluted, skin is pink and blue eyes are common with double diluted [[cream gene|creams]]. </blockquote> |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|D |
|D |
||
|''D''<br>''d'' |
|''D''<br>''d'' |
||
|'''''DD or Dd''''': [[Dun |
|'''''DD or Dd''''': [[Dun gene]] Another [[dilution gene]]. Horse shows a diluted body color to pinkish-red, yellow-red, yellow or mouse gray and has dark points including dorsal stripe, shoulder stripe and leg barring.<br>'''''dd''''': Horse has undiluted coat color. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|TO |
|TO |
||
|''TO''<br>''to'' |
|''TO''<br>''to'' |
||
|'''''TOTO''''' or '''''Toto''''': Produces regular and distinct ovals or |
|'''''TOTO''''' or '''''Toto''''': [[Tobiano]], a form of [[pinto horse|pinto]] patterning. Produces regular and distinct ovals or rounded patterns of white and color with a somewhat vertical orientation. White extends across the back, down the legs, but face and tail are usually dark.<br>'''''toto''''': No [[tobiano]] pattern present. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|O Also noted as Fr or FrO |
|O Also noted as Fr or FrO |
||
|''O''<br>''o'' |
|''O''<br>''o'' |
||
|'''''OO''''' or '''''Oo''''': '''Overo''' or '''Frame Overo''' pattern - |
|'''''OO''''' or '''''Oo''''': '''Overo''' or '''Frame Overo''' pattern - [[Pinto horse]] pattern that forms a solid frame around white spotting. White is usually horizontal in orientation with jagged edges, color crosses the back and legs, face is often white. [[Overo]] as an allele is different from overo as a registration since the registration also includes the splash overo and [[sabino horse|sabino]] alleles. Homozygous overo is associated with [[lethal white syndrome]], characterized by an incomplete [[colon]] and the inability to defecate, which leads to death or humane euthanization within days of birth.<br>'''''oo''''': No overo pattern present. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|Ch |
|Ch |
||
|''Ch''<BR>''ch'' |
|''Ch''<BR>''ch'' |
||
|'''Champagne''': A rare dilution gene that creates pumpkin-colored freckled skin, amber or blue eyes, and gives a bronze cast to hair. The skin surrounding the eye must be pink with freckles |
|'''Champagne''': A rare but [[dominant]] [[dilution gene]] that creates pumpkin-colored freckled skin, amber, greenish, or blue eyes, and gives a bronze cast to hair. The skin surrounding the eye must be pink with freckles in adulthood. <BR>'''''ChCh''''' or '''''Chch''''': [[Champagne gene|Champagne]] dilution evident (See Genetic Formulas Chart below.)<BR>'''''chch''''': No champagne dilution <ref>"Genetics of Champagne Coloring." ''The Horse'' online edition, accessed May 31, 2007 at http://www.thehorse.com/viewarticle.aspx?ID=9686</ref> |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|F |
|F |
||
Line 71: | Line 75: | ||
|P |
|P |
||
|''P''<BR>''p'' |
|''P''<BR>''p'' |
||
|'''Pangare''' (Mealy): |
|'''Pangare''' (Mealy): Lightening of hairs in limited regions. The effects of this allele appear in areas of "soft" skin, including the muzzle, behind the elbows, in the flanks, on the buttock, above or around the eyes, and along the belly.<BR>'''''PP''''' or '''''Pp''''': Mealy or [[Pangare]] dilution of pigment.<BR>'''''pp''''': no mealy looking lightening of pigment. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|Rn |
|Rn |
||
|''Rn''<BR>''rn'' |
|''Rn''<BR>''rn'' |
||
|'''''RnRn''''' or '''''Rnrn''''': [[Roan (color)|roan]] pattern of white hair mixed in with base color. There is no [[Equine coat color genetics#Lethal Roan question|lethal roan question]].<BR>'''''rnrn''''': No roan pattern. |
|'''''RnRn''''' or '''''Rnrn''''': [[Roan (color)|roan]] pattern of white hair mixed in with base color. There probably is no [[Equine coat color genetics#Lethal Roan question|lethal roan question]].<BR>'''''rnrn''''': No roan pattern. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|Rb |
|Rb |
||
Line 83: | Line 87: | ||
|Sb |
|Sb |
||
|''Sb''<br>''sb'' |
|''Sb''<br>''sb'' |
||
|'''[[sabino horse|Sabino]]''' - Assorted |
|'''[[sabino horse|Sabino]]''' - Assorted [[pinto horse|pinto]] or roan-like markings.<BR>[[sabino horse|Sabino]] may be [[polygenic]] (a gene-complex rather than a single gene pair), caused by several different genes. Recognized by abundant white on the legs, belly spots or body spots that are can be flecked and roaned, chin spots, or white on the face extending past the eyes. Sabino is registered as overo by some registries, but is not the overo or frame overo allele. No risk of lethal white, though some "Fully expressed" sabinos may be completely [[white (horse)|white]] in coat color.<BR>'''''SbSb''''' or '''''Sbsb''''': Sabino markings.<BR>sbsb: No sabino marks.<BR>'''''SB1''''':The only Sabino gene currently detected by DNA testing, however does not appear to be the gene that creates sabino coloring in Arabians or Clydesdales. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|Spl |
|Spl |
||
|''Spl''<BR>''spl'' |
|''Spl''<BR>''spl'' |
||
|'''Splash, Splashed White''' - |
|'''Splash, Splashed White''' - A type of [[pinto horse]] coloring recorded in the overo family, but related to the overo gene. Resembles reverse tobiano with white moving from the bottom of the horse towards the top. The horse's head will look as if dunked in bucket of white paint. Commonly has blue eyes. <BR>'''''SplSpl''''' or '''''Splspl''''': Splashed markings. Splash is not associated with frame overo [[lethal white syndrome]].<BR>'''''splspl''''': No splashed markings. |
||
Alternate theory: |
Alternate theory: |
||
Incomplete dominant. '''''SplSpl''''':classic Splash markings.'''''Splspl''''':socks, face markings, may be small in the "normal" marking range or into the pinto range with or without blue eyes. '''''splspl''''' causes no white at all. |
Incomplete dominant. '''''SplSpl''''':classic Splash markings.'''''Splspl''''':socks, face markings, may be small in the "normal" marking range or into the pinto range with or without blue eyes. '''''splspl''''' causes no white at all. |
||
Line 93: | Line 97: | ||
|Sty |
|Sty |
||
|''Sty''<P>''sty'' |
|''Sty''<P>''sty'' |
||
|'''Sooty'''<BR>'''''StySty''''' or '''''Stysty''''': Black mixed into body coat.<BR>'''''stysty''''': No black mixed into coat. |
|'''Sooty'''<BR>'''''StySty''''' or '''''Stysty''''': Black mixed into body coat, may create dark bays or "brown" horses and liver chestnut.<BR>'''''stysty''''': No black mixed into coat. Proposed theory, allele not yet located. |
||
|- |
|- |
||
|Z |
|Z |
||
Line 101: | Line 105: | ||
|Lp |
|Lp |
||
|''Lp''<BR>''lp'' |
|''Lp''<BR>''lp'' |
||
|[[Appaloosa]] or [[Leopard (color)|Leopard]] spotting gene. Produces coat spotting patterns, mottling over otherwise dark skin, striped hooves and white [[scelera]] around the eye. |
|||
|[[Appaloosa]] spotting gene. The effects of this allele are minimallized or suppressed in horses carrying E or E+{{Fact|date=February 2007}} |
|||
|} |
|} |
||
== Genetic formulas and color definitions == |
== Genetic formulas and color definitions == |
||
<!-- Table needs to be Wikified --> |
|||
<DIV class="MsoNormal"> |
<DIV class="MsoNormal"> |
||
<TABLE BORDER COLS=2 WIDTH="100%" > |
<TABLE BORDER COLS=2 WIDTH="100%" > |
||
Line 163: | Line 165: | ||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
<TD>E,A,CC,D</TD> |
<TD>E,A,CC,D</TD> |
||
<TD>Dun, Zebra Dun, Bay Dun, Classic [[Dun (color)|Dun]]</TD> |
<TD>Dun, "Zebra" Dun, "Bay" Dun, Classic [[Dun (color)|Dun]]</TD> |
||
</TR> |
</TR> |
||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
Line 171: | Line 173: | ||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
<TD>gg, E, aa, CC, dd, RN</TD> |
<TD>gg, E, aa, CC, dd, RN</TD> |
||
<TD> |
<TD>Blue [[Roan (color)|Roan]]</TD> |
||
</TR> |
</TR> |
||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
Line 212: | Line 214: | ||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
<TD>gg, Ch, ee, aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto</TD> |
<TD>gg, Ch, ee, aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto</TD> |
||
<TD>Gold - looks like Palomino</TD> |
<TD>Gold Champagne - looks like Palomino</TD> |
||
</TR> |
</TR> |
||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
<TD>gg, Ch, E, A, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto</TD> |
<TD>gg, Ch, E, A, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto</TD> |
||
<TD>Amber</TD> |
<TD>Amber Champagne</TD> |
||
</TR> |
</TR> |
||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
<TD>gg, Ch, E, aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto</TD> |
<TD>gg, Ch, E, aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto</TD> |
||
<TD>Champagne</TD> |
<TD>Classic Champagne</TD> |
||
</TR> |
</TR> |
||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
<TD>gg, Ch, ee, CcrCcr</TD> |
<TD>gg, Ch, ee, CcrCcr</TD> |
||
<TD> |
<TD>Ivory Champagne</TD> |
||
</TR> |
</TR> |
||
<TR> |
<TR> |
||
Line 250: | Line 252: | ||
Hintz, H. F. and VanVleck, L. D., published 1979. "Lethal Dominant Roan in Horses". ''Journal of Heredity'', 70:145-146. This study, based on percentages of roan foals thrown by roan parents, popularized the idea of Lethal Roan Syndrome. The study did not include direct genetic analysis and assumed fetus absorption preventing birth. Similar studies suggested that roan-to-roan breedings were lethal because the resulting embryos were absorbed. This was thought to be true because homozygous roans, horses that carried two alleles for the roan characteristic, were rare. |
Hintz, H. F. and VanVleck, L. D., published 1979. "Lethal Dominant Roan in Horses". ''Journal of Heredity'', 70:145-146. This study, based on percentages of roan foals thrown by roan parents, popularized the idea of Lethal Roan Syndrome. The study did not include direct genetic analysis and assumed fetus absorption preventing birth. Similar studies suggested that roan-to-roan breedings were lethal because the resulting embryos were absorbed. This was thought to be true because homozygous roans, horses that carried two alleles for the roan characteristic, were rare. |
||
A recent genetic study of roans by Dr. Bowling |
A recent genetic study of roans by Dr. Bowling refuted Hintz and VanVleck’s inferences. Using genetic analysis, Dr. Bowling found several homozygous roans and no evidence of a Lethal Roan Syndrome.<ref>[http://www.hancockhorses.com/article-roanQHNews.pdf</ref> |
||
==See also== |
|||
*[[Equine coat color]] |
|||
*[[ |
|||
{{Commons|Horse coat colors}} |
{{Commons|Horse coat colors}} |
Revision as of 21:07, 31 May 2007
- For less technical information on horse colors generally, see Equine coat color
Equine coat color genetics determine a horse's coat color. All horses begin genetically with a base coat of "red" (chestnut) or "black."[1] Then, additional alleles or "modifiers" act upon the base colors to create all other equine coat colors. This base color is designated as "e" for the recessive red allele and "E" for the dominant black allele.
Coat color alleles affect melanin, the pigment or coloring of the coat. There are two chemically distinct types of melanin, red–yellow phaeomelanin, and the brown–black eumelanin. All coloration genes in mammals affect either the production or final effect of these two chemicals.
Genes appear in sets of two, with each individual gene being called an allele.[1] When a gene set contains two copies of the same allele, it is called homozygous. When it has two different alleles, it is heterozygous. For a recessive gene to be expressed, it must be homozygous, but a dominant gene will be expressed if it is heterozygous or homozygous. The difference is that a horse with a homozygous dominant gene will always pass it on to their offspring, while a horse with a heterozygous dominant will statistically only pass on the gene 50% of the time.
Background information
There are currently two major theories of equine coat color genetics: those based on the work of the late Dr. Ann Bowling of the University of California, Davis and of Dr. Phillip Sponenberg of Virginia Polytechnic Institute. These theories overlap, and have more similarities than differences.
The terms Alleles and Modifiers are used interchangeably in this article. An allele identified with a capital letter is a dominant gene, one identified with a lower-case letter is a recessive gene.
The genetics of white horse markings are not yet fully understood but are probably influenced by multiple alleles.
- Note: For a quick lesson in genetics and heredity, see the articles on alleles or other footnoted tutorials on inheritance.[2]
Alleles and effects
Alleles | Effect of combined pairs of alleles | |
E | E e |
EE or Ee: Horse forms black pigment in skin and hair. ee: Horse is chestnut, it has black pigment in skin, but red pigment in hair. White, gray, agouti, roaning, pattern (spotting) and dilution genes will all modify both red and black. |
E+ also noted as Ed. | E+ e+ Fading and non-fading black |
Proposed theory, allele yet to be located, does not appear to occur on the same locus as the E and e alleles.[citation needed]
E+E+or E+e+: Dominant black, non-fading horse. One theory, unproven and highly unlikely, is that E+ is dominant over agouti. |
A | A a |
Agouti: Acts on "E" to restrict eumelanin, or black pigment, to "points," allowing red coat color to show on body. Has no visible effect on "e" or red, as there is no black pigment to restrict. AA or Aa horse is a Bay, black hair shows only in points pattern (usually mane, tail, legs, sometimes tips of ears). aa: No agouti gene. If horse has E allele, then horse will be uniformly black. |
W | W w |
WW: Lethal. Embryo reabsorbed or fetus dies en utero.[3]
|
G | G g |
GG or Gg: gray gene. Horse shows progressive silvering with age to white or flea-bitten, but is born a non-gray color. Pigment is always present in skin and eyes at all stages of silvering. Gray horses range from white to dark gray depending on age and the proportion of white hairs in the coat. Horses' coats gray in a manner similar to graying in human hair. gg: Horse does not gray with aging. |
Cr | Cr cr |
Cream gene The cream gene is an incomplete dominant.
3) CrCr Cremello or Perlino: Double dilution factor. Red pigment is diluted to a pale cream. Black pigment is diluted to a reddish shade. Skin and eye color are also diluted, skin is pink and blue eyes are common with double diluted creams. |
D | D d |
DD or Dd: Dun gene Another dilution gene. Horse shows a diluted body color to pinkish-red, yellow-red, yellow or mouse gray and has dark points including dorsal stripe, shoulder stripe and leg barring. dd: Horse has undiluted coat color. |
TO | TO to |
TOTO or Toto: Tobiano, a form of pinto patterning. Produces regular and distinct ovals or rounded patterns of white and color with a somewhat vertical orientation. White extends across the back, down the legs, but face and tail are usually dark. toto: No tobiano pattern present. |
O Also noted as Fr or FrO | O o |
OO or Oo: Overo or Frame Overo pattern - Pinto horse pattern that forms a solid frame around white spotting. White is usually horizontal in orientation with jagged edges, color crosses the back and legs, face is often white. Overo as an allele is different from overo as a registration since the registration also includes the splash overo and sabino alleles. Homozygous overo is associated with lethal white syndrome, characterized by an incomplete colon and the inability to defecate, which leads to death or humane euthanization within days of birth. oo: No overo pattern present. |
Ch | Ch ch |
Champagne: A rare but dominant dilution gene that creates pumpkin-colored freckled skin, amber, greenish, or blue eyes, and gives a bronze cast to hair. The skin surrounding the eye must be pink with freckles in adulthood. ChCh or Chch: Champagne dilution evident (See Genetic Formulas Chart below.) chch: No champagne dilution [4] |
F | F f |
Effects visible on red or chestnut colors only. FF or Ff: Red points on ee horses. ff: Flaxen points on ee horses. Proposed theory, allele not located.[citation needed] |
P | P p |
Pangare (Mealy): Lightening of hairs in limited regions. The effects of this allele appear in areas of "soft" skin, including the muzzle, behind the elbows, in the flanks, on the buttock, above or around the eyes, and along the belly. PP or Pp: Mealy or Pangare dilution of pigment. pp: no mealy looking lightening of pigment. |
Rn | Rn rn |
RnRn or Rnrn: roan pattern of white hair mixed in with base color. There probably is no lethal roan question. rnrn: No roan pattern. |
Rb | Rb rb |
Rabicano: Partial roaning with ‘coon’ tail markings. Thought to be a dominant gene by Sponenberg. RbRb or Rbrb: Rabicano markings. rbrb: No rabicano traits. |
Sb | Sb sb |
Sabino - Assorted pinto or roan-like markings. Sabino may be polygenic (a gene-complex rather than a single gene pair), caused by several different genes. Recognized by abundant white on the legs, belly spots or body spots that are can be flecked and roaned, chin spots, or white on the face extending past the eyes. Sabino is registered as overo by some registries, but is not the overo or frame overo allele. No risk of lethal white, though some "Fully expressed" sabinos may be completely white in coat color. SbSb or Sbsb: Sabino markings. sbsb: No sabino marks. SB1:The only Sabino gene currently detected by DNA testing, however does not appear to be the gene that creates sabino coloring in Arabians or Clydesdales. |
Spl | Spl spl |
Splash, Splashed White - A type of pinto horse coloring recorded in the overo family, but related to the overo gene. Resembles reverse tobiano with white moving from the bottom of the horse towards the top. The horse's head will look as if dunked in bucket of white paint. Commonly has blue eyes. SplSpl or Splspl: Splashed markings. Splash is not associated with frame overo lethal white syndrome. splspl: No splashed markings. Alternate theory: Incomplete dominant. SplSpl:classic Splash markings.Splspl:socks, face markings, may be small in the "normal" marking range or into the pinto range with or without blue eyes. splspl causes no white at all. |
Sty | Sty sty |
Sooty StySty or Stysty: Black mixed into body coat, may create dark bays or "brown" horses and liver chestnut. stysty: No black mixed into coat. Proposed theory, allele not yet located. |
Z | Z z |
ZZ or Zz: Silver dapple - Dilutes eumelanin or black pigment. Converts black to brown with white mane and tail or results in silver coloring. zz: No silver dapple. |
Lp | Lp lp |
Appaloosa or Leopard spotting gene. Produces coat spotting patterns, mottling over otherwise dark skin, striped hooves and white scelera around the eye. |
Genetic formulas and color definitions
|
||
W | White | |
G | Gray | |
E, A, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto | Bay or Brown | |
E, aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto | Black | |
ee, aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto | Red: Sorrel or Chestnut | |
E, A, CCcr, dd, gg, ww, toto | Buckskin | |
ee, CCcr, dd, gg, ww, toto | Palomino | |
ee, CcrCcr | Cremello | |
E, CcrCcr | Perlino | |
E, A, CC, D, gg, ww, toto | Yellow or "buckskin" Dun | |
E, aa, CC, D, gg, ww, toto | Mouse Dun, Blue Dun or Grulla | |
E,A,CC,D | Dun, "Zebra" Dun, "Bay" Dun, Classic Dun | |
ee, CC, D, gg, ww, toto | Red Dun | |
gg, E, aa, CC, dd, RN | Blue Roan | |
gg, E, A, CC, dd, RN | Bay Roan | |
gg, ee, CC, dd, RN | Red Roan | |
gg, E, A, CCcr, dd, RN | Buckskin Roan (Red Roan) | |
gg, ee, CCcr, dd, RN | Palomino Roan (Red Roan) | |
gg, E, A, CC, D, RN | Buckskin Roan (Red Roan) | |
gg, E, aa, CC, D, RN | Mouse Dun Roan, Grulla Roan, or Blue Roan& | |
gg,ee, CC, D, RN | Red Dun Roan (Red Roan) | |
gg, E, A, CC, dd, gg, ww, TO | Bay Tobiano | |
gg, ee, CC, D, gg, ww, TO | Red Dun Tobiano | |
gg, Ch, ee, aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto | Gold Champagne - looks like Palomino | |
gg, Ch, E, A, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto | Amber Champagne | |
gg, Ch, E, aa, CC, dd, gg, ww, toto | Classic Champagne | |
gg, Ch, ee, CcrCcr | Ivory Champagne | |
gg, E, aa, CC, dd, TO, Sb | Black Sabino-Tobiano (Tovero without lethal white.) | |
gg, E, aa, CC, dd, TO, O | Black Tobiano-Overo (Tovero carrying lethal white.) | |
ee, CCcr, dd, gg, ww, TO | Palomino Tobiano Paint | |
gg, ee, aa, CC, dd, TO, Spl | Red Tobiano-Splash (Tovero without lethal white.) |
Lethal roan question
Hintz, H. F. and VanVleck, L. D., published 1979. "Lethal Dominant Roan in Horses". Journal of Heredity, 70:145-146. This study, based on percentages of roan foals thrown by roan parents, popularized the idea of Lethal Roan Syndrome. The study did not include direct genetic analysis and assumed fetus absorption preventing birth. Similar studies suggested that roan-to-roan breedings were lethal because the resulting embryos were absorbed. This was thought to be true because homozygous roans, horses that carried two alleles for the roan characteristic, were rare.
A recent genetic study of roans by Dr. Bowling refuted Hintz and VanVleck’s inferences. Using genetic analysis, Dr. Bowling found several homozygous roans and no evidence of a Lethal Roan Syndrome.[5]
See also
References
- ^ a b "Genetics of Champagne Coloring." The Horse online edition, accessed May 31, 2007 at http://www.thehorse.com/viewarticle.aspx?ID=9686
- ^ http://northonline.sccd.ctc.edu/tstilson/BIO101Inheritance.ppt Online tutorial on heredity
- ^ Mau, C., Poncet, P. A., Bucher, B., Stranzinger, G. & Rieder, S. (2004) "Genetic mapping of dominant white (W), a homozygous lethal condition in the horse (Equus caballus)." Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics 121 (6), 374-383. doi: 10.1111/ j.1439-0388.2004.00481.x. Accessed September 6, 2006 at [1]
- ^ "Genetics of Champagne Coloring." The Horse online edition, accessed May 31, 2007 at http://www.thehorse.com/viewarticle.aspx?ID=9686
- ^ [http://www.hancockhorses.com/article-roanQHNews.pdf
Sources and external links
- DreamView Farm Horse Genetic Color Guide - Main basis for this article. Used with author's permission.
- Horse genetics page from the UC Davis Veterinary Genetics Lab
- Bowling, Ann T. "Coat Color Genetics: Positive Horse Identification" from Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis.
- Horse color genetics by Dr. Sponenberg
- D. Phillip Sponenberg, DVM, Ph.D.
Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine
Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061 - Grullo and roan color education- Cedar Ridge Quarter Horses
- A discussion of equine roan color genetics - Hancock Horses
- "In the Genes." Quarter Horse News, Dec 15, 2004
- Equine color genetics information - Provides clear explanation; a good source for the beginner. Contains info on "possible lethal roan".
- International Champagne Horse Registry
- About Horse Color, Genetics, & Markings From The ULTIMATE Horse Site. Includes information on common & rare horse colors, includes photos.