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In this Discussion
- Abbey Road January 2016
- Cheers January 2016
- Ritsika January 2016
- RoseFlute January 2016
- Salvistar January 2016
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Smokey Black combined with LP question
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I recently bred my Vault of Stars stallion with a few smokey black mares and the combination shocked me. These are the two foals that had me scratching my head and full of curiosity.
I had the second one color tested because the Breeders Club wasn't giving me all the disclosure I wanted. I knew she couldn't be silver but that was the first thing that came to my mind. She turned out to be Smokey Grullo Splash Tobiano Appaloosa ( Ee aa CCcr dD gg Ff SstyS PP KittoKit SpsSps LlpL ECA3P+ECA3P+ WF: Medium )
I decided to scan the horse community for similar cases and found quite a few:Another smokey grullo appaloosa
A smokey black appaloosa
A smokey black appaloosa
They range from the milk chocolate to coffee to sepia. Compared to non-LP smokey black foals - who are all shades of black - with variations of sooty:Smokey Black
Smokey Black sooty+
Smokey Grullo sooty+
Am I safe to assume that the LP gene expressed with heterozygous cream on a black base is what makes the color turn brown-ish? If so, why does this occur? If not, what is making the foals less black and more brown? -
The range of colors is amazing. Quite a few of my silver blacks this season are noticeably chocolatey. Certainly I know that I can't visually pick the difference between black and smokey black, but I can usually see the difference between smokey Grullo and plain Grullo, especially if I look at a bunch one after another, like when I'm going through a pasture of foals.
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It looks like the ones you have here that are much lighter than the others have Dun, which will dilute on black a lot more than cream will. :)
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I do think your LP smokey grullo looks more brown tinted than the normal grullo gray. I don't see anything else it could be other than the LP.SALVISTAR PERFORMANCE HORSES
Barn ID - 2358 -
Thanks for posting this, very interesting! It seems like Lp does interesting things with cream, my buckskins are odd colors too.
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@Cheers, the color range is amazing!
@RoseFlute, correct. The colt is not a dun and he is the dark coffee color - almost the color of a non-LP grullo. Whereas the filly is a grullo and definitely more of the sepia color which is much lighter than the non-sooty grullos.
@Salvistar and Abbey Road, I'm encouraged that you both agree that LP appears to be the gene that is correlated to this chocolate-tinting.
I will keep investigating and post other horses here as I go along. Thanks for joining the discussion everyone! :)