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20 answers

What sort of bread? Whole Wheat, Rye, Sourdough, or what?!?

2006-08-10 19:39:08 · answer #1 · answered by kaylora 4 · 0 1

Yes. I have recently went through this with one of my dogs. She is balck and the father is black, well the puppies came out tan. The mother of my mama dog was tan, and the father to the dad dog was beige. So the puppies inherited the genes from the mom and dad and got their colors. I always believed black was a dominant color, but i was definately wrong on that one.

2006-08-11 01:07:21 · answer #2 · answered by badgirl41 6 · 0 0

i think of a few human beings could argue that minor mutations are distinctive than speciation. A black guy or woman and a white guy or woman could make toddlers together in simple terms effective; the transformations are little sufficient that they might nonetheless produce completely functional offspring. i don't know that any one with extra brains than a rock is aruging approximately regardless of if mutations happen and specific features are chosen for in specific populations. human beings have controlled to reproduce wolves till we've been given the toy poodle. the subject is extra "How did the species that exist immediately become?" despite the fact that a toy poodle can nonetheless theoretically have toddlers with a wolf, a human in simple terms will not be able to breed with a cauliflower by using fact we've a distinctive form of chromosomes and distinctive association of the genes that we do share, regardless of if we ought to get previous the different hurdles. i think of that's what the creationists (notice- this would not incorporate me) take subject with.

2016-10-01 22:36:42 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes, It is a little like paint. Black can hide all colors. So a black dog could be carrying white, yellow, brown anything lighter than him as well as black. This is called Dominate
A white dog, like white paint, can't hide other colors, He carries only the white gene. This is called Recessive
A brown dog, cannot carry black (if he carried black, he'd be black as black is dominate over the brown color)
The darker the dog, the more colors he could be carrying.
The lighter the dog, the fewer colors he carries.
A Black Dog that carries only the black gene, will only produce black pups no matter what color he is bred to.
A white dog bred to a white dog will produce only white since white cannot carry any darker colors.
If you breed a black dog to a white dog all the pups will be black BUT some of those black pups will carry a white gene.
If you breed those black pups carrying the white gene to another black dog that is carrying a white gene, some of the pups will be black and some will be white.
This is just basic. There are exceptions.

2006-08-10 20:32:11 · answer #4 · answered by Blossom 4 · 0 1

Yes. It depends on the genes of the parent and which colors are dominant and recessive. As a human example, two parents with brown eyes can have a blue-eyed child provided that both parents carry the recessive blue-eyed gene and the child receives the blue-eyed gene from each parent. The blue-eyed gene is not obvious in the parents because the brown gene is dominant and essentially masks the gene for blue eyes. Something similar occurs in dogs with regard to the color of their coat. Of course, it's much more complex and my example is a simplified one, but I think it gets the point across.

2006-08-10 19:46:46 · answer #5 · answered by red_hourglass_widow 2 · 0 1

depends on their bloodline for the last 5 generations of the puppies' family. puppies inherit them from their parents or for the last 5 generations of their kind.

another thing is, when the puppies are newly born, they still don't have their true color. they might get lighter or darker color than what color will they have when they grow up. their color will change slowly as they grow up and usually will turn up like their parents'.

PS
if you have any more questions about dogs, just IM me when I'm available. my family's a protection dog breeder so you can count on me whenever you need information about dogs.

2006-08-10 19:46:56 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

There's a 25% chance that dominant trait won't show and the pups will be a different color, therefore, it's normal unless both dogs are pure breds

2006-08-10 19:38:29 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Yes, puppies can be any color that is in their lineage, except brindle..one parent must be brindle for pups to be..Also, many puppies are born darker ( in some cases lighter) than they will be as they mature..Also, white spots may change as the pup matures..black/brown Spots (or speckles) don't usually show up at birth..

2006-08-10 19:46:19 · answer #8 · answered by Chetco 7 · 1 1

yes- dogs have genes just like humans do... whatever is in the DNA and gene pool of the 2 dogs that bred will show in their pups. this is very common in dogs, since many dogs have multiple colors in their fur- the pups could turn out to be solid of any of those colors, or mixed/matched.

2006-08-10 19:36:06 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

Pups can also change shade as they grow. not that a black dog turns white but a dark brown with a lotta black mask or even black hairs scattered over the entire pup enought to make them look almost black can lighten up to a light brown like it's parents.
ANd then you can get into dominate & ressesive genes.

PS Chetco bridle is ressesive to black

2006-08-10 23:55:15 · answer #10 · answered by ragapple 7 · 0 1

Yes. Just like humans. If two dark skined people have a child the child could come out light skinned. I have a cousin that is like that because he grandmother is light.

2006-08-10 19:37:32 · answer #11 · answered by Simmy 5 · 0 1

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