Another Splashed White Test falls through the cracks....
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As far as I can tell from the
As far as I can tell from the pictures no white at all and no blue eyes.
The homozygous offspring http://colorgenetics.info/equine/conten…
and the sire
There is another tested HOM
There is another tested HOM splash Gotland who has a solid parent.
SW1/SW1 Offspring http://uploads.ifokus.se/uploads/0b4/0b…
Sire http://www.gotlandsruss.se/AllgunnensYe…
Solid dam http://www.stuteriguldhagen.se/Bilder/T…
Are you asking should you test?
I am wondering what the subject line means. It seems that this is the case of two negative parents that have produced a negative offspring. Why would this mean a splashed white was missed? Am I missing a result? The mother is a homozygous tobiano, father is a solid. Appears that foal is a tobiano. None of the horses appear to carry splashed white. Am I missing something? Trying to follow what the problem is. If the question is should you test, then I would say without hesitation that that answer should be NO. Neither parent appears to be splashed white and neither does the foal. Hope this helps.
I agree with Monsterpony, the
I agree with Monsterpony, the foal has what we have always considered to be very "splashy" white. That when combined with a blue eye seems to indicate a possible Splashed White mutation that has not been located. Of course, further study will be needed to determine if this is indeed the case.
Already made it when the test
Already made it when the test came out! :P
Except for this horse who is
Except for this horse who is not dun and has homozygous SW1 offspring http://www.sukuposti.net/kuva/nayta/spn…
and this horse [img]http://colorgenetics.info/equine/sites/…]
who is tested SW1 and is also dun. BDB FASHION DESIGN Red Dun Paint Mare Photo Courtesy of rodeoratdogs
Thanks Threnody. Pacific
Thanks Threnody.
Pacific Pintos - Do you know if that stallion has white spots on the bottoms of his feet? I remember reading registry information for a certain breed of horse/pony that wasn't supposed to have much white, if any, and in the registry they recorded, not only if there were white hairs ANYWHERE, but also if there were white on the bottoms of the feet. I was under the impression that white markings could be as minimal as a tiny white splot on the sole of a foot, if even that.
Threnody wrote:Already made
[quote=Threnody]Already made it when the test came out! :P
[IMG]http://i872.photobucket.com/albums/ab28…]
Love this, cracks me up =)) We should make Threnodys' test all the ponies T-Shirts! LOL
What about Annie? Sorry I'm slower than you guys when it come to some of this stuff :ymblushing: .
I have no idea if there is
I have no idea if there is white on his soles.
UCD has just stated that miniatures do not fall into the same category as full size horses and frequently have little to no visible white.
It has been the same with the LWO gene, but there are certain genetic lines that are known to carry LWO, so if you have them in your pedigree you know to test.
The splashed white test, especially with ones that appear to have it testing negative, and then ones that are solid testing positive, is proving to be a complicated gene for breeders.
Its already been proven that
Its already been proven that there is at least one more splash mutation that they haven't found yet.