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2006-11-30 15:11:34 · 7 answers · asked by kimmikwoody 1 in Pets Dogs

7 answers

More than likely both brindle and black, but if they both carry the recessive fawn gene, you may get a fawn as well

2006-11-30 15:17:12 · answer #1 · answered by Feline Female 4 · 0 1

First, if you have to ask you should not be breeding. Genetics is a very important part of responsible breeding!

According to the AKC website here are the only correct colors of a PUG!
"Color-The colors are silver, apricot-fawn, or black. The silver or apricot-fawn colors should be decided so as to make the contrast complete between the color and the trace and the mask. "

Now, let us talk about the pesky brindle color, and how it cannot
occur in a purebred Pug. First, the working of the ayay gene produces the red or tan or fawn coat (in this case). The Em is dominant to the plain E and plain e as well. That means that dogs
which carry EmEm, EmE and Eme will all appear to be the same: fawn with a black mask. Only by having breeding records of the parents and their offspring could you determine which specific gene a specific dog carries.

The allele A for black coat, coupled with the brindle gene ebr will
produce black solid dogs, since A conceals the brindle gene. The
brindle gene, ebr, when found in conjunction with an Em will ALWAYS show up as a dog with brindle markings and a black mask. The combinations of Eebr or ebr ebr will produce the brindle without a black mask, or brindle all over. However, ANYTIME the ebr gene is present even if there is just one - the dog will have a visible brindle coat color. That means you cannot have a recessive brindle, you cannot have a “hidden” brindle gene - unless it is in a solid black dog that masks the gene. However, any dog with a brindle gene that is not black will show the brindle coloration. Therefore, when someone tells you they bred a fawn sire to a fawn dam and got a brindle puppy... it cannot happen genetically. Some other dog, which does carry the brindle gene, MUST have been the sire if the dam is a
fawn Pug. Pugs have carried only the Em gene for over 100 years (that is, every dog has EmEm) and this was demonstrated during test breedings back in the 1940s under controlled scientific conditions. So dogs with the brindle gene today must have been introduced from another breed carrying the ebr gene, making it a crossbred dog. Science has came a long way and before you know it they will be able to tell just want parents dogs have, but for now the owner is trusted. So to sum up the registering with the AKC for Brindles or Pugs of color but in the future the DNA will tell all, I hope.So for people that really love the Pure Pug we have the future.
Any one wanting to use this information can. I would also like to
invite ever Pug person to write Dennis B. Sprung, 5580 Centerview Drive, Raleigh, North Carolina 27606-3390. He is president and chief executive officer. Express the concerns of AKC registering so call brindle Pugs. They say if the sire and dam are registered the litter can be registered . We all know some do not tell the truth. The science is the only way to prove this. If the so call brindle continues to be registered some where in the future this will be a big problem.

2006-11-30 16:32:08 · answer #2 · answered by doggie_poopie 3 · 0 1

You will have Pug crosses. No matter WHAT someone tries to tell you, Pugs do NOT carry the gene for brindling. The only way for this dog to have a gene for brindle would be with a cross in its background with another breed.

2006-11-30 15:25:31 · answer #3 · answered by whpptwmn 5 · 1 1

I'm not sure about pugs but possibly they would be brindle. When I rescued my dog she was pregnant. She is a yellow lab golden retriever mix so she is gold, and all of her puppies were brindle so it must be more dominant than gold. But Black is a very dominant color so i'm not totally sure.

2006-11-30 15:20:27 · answer #4 · answered by Megan B 2 · 0 0

ok so what? His shade isn't common in the teach ring.. so he's not teach or breeding high quality.. ninety-ninety 9% of canine at the instant are not teach or breeding high quality in any case. That doesnt advise he's an unacceptable puppy. Love him as he's, even along with his unique shade. He merits love and robust care as much as his black and fawn clutter friends do. extra ok so I did a seek on "brindle pugs" in the solutions.. I see questions that are one million-2 years previous, and additionally you anticipate people to be attentive to precisely what you're conversing approximately? I dont see any modern-day questions that could desire to have led to you to deliver this subject count up. there is debate between different breeds approximately colours.. white in German shepherds and Dobes, as an occasion. In my breed there's a debate approximately blue eyes. each breed has a written time-honored that defines the breed's visual charm. specific colours have been bred for because of the fact the colors served a undeniable objective, or the colors are to define the breed and what that's. some colours have been suitable to well-being issues in specific breeds.

2016-12-29 17:53:19 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It depends on if your black pug carries two black genes, or a black and something else, (fawn). Black is dominant and brindle/fawn coloring is recessive so both parents must carry the fawn/brindle gene to pass it on to the pups.

2006-11-30 15:15:04 · answer #6 · answered by dolly 6 · 0 1

blandle color pug

2006-11-30 15:13:18 · answer #7 · answered by flaltajr 3 · 0 2

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