Community Forum
Horse World Online
Breed horses and ponies, raise your foals, and train the next champion in this exciting and realistic online horse breeding game.
RSÆ project
Create a topic to track the progress of your breeding program, help support other breeders with their breeding goals.
-
- Visit My Farm
- Posts: 2375
- Joined: Wed Oct 14, 2015 4:05 pm
- Visit My Farm
Note for self, possible studs to look at in future
Post by Malakai10 »
Shesha iHashi:
Colours:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/2778381
Sprinting:
Boerperd:
Show jumping:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/1063645
General competition:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3067163
Colour:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/2778381
Colours:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/2778381
Sprinting:
Boerperd:
Show jumping:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/1063645
General competition:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3067163
Colour:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/2778381
-
- Visit My Farm
- Posts: 2375
- Joined: Wed Oct 14, 2015 4:05 pm
- Visit My Farm
Re: RSÆ project
Post by Malakai10 »
It's been a while, I think, since I've gotten a plain seal brown. It's rather pretty
1150 RSÆ Glaze's Dribble Heat
1150 RSÆ Glaze's Dribble Heat
-
- Visit My Farm
- Posts: 2375
- Joined: Wed Oct 14, 2015 4:05 pm
- Visit My Farm
-
- Premium
- Visit My Farm
- Posts: 261
- Joined: Sat Sep 03, 2016 6:44 am
- Visit My Farm
Re: RSÆ project
Post by Malakai20 »
Claim: silver causes flaxen in chestnut horses.
Aim: to prove that silver has no effect on chestnut
Notes for self on silver and flaxen
We know that silver is dominant and thus only requires one gene to express. Thus, any black- or bay-based horse with silver will express it. One would assume that the silver would still act as a dominant gene when combined with chestnut (if it did cause flaxen.) However, perhaps like tiger eye and champagne, it is dominant when combined with E and recessive when combined with e/e.
A potential argument might arise that perhaps whether silver causes flaxen chestnut might be due to multiple genes (like Lp and PATN1. or the tobiano pattern genes and To switch) To which I would argue: is it not a simpler explanation that the horses have the flaxen (fl) gene and that a line that carries silver co-incidentally carries recessive flaxen - which is independent of silver - than that there are mysterious silver related genes causing chestnut flaxens when we know that silver has no affect on red hairs in real life and that this game attempts realism wherever possible?
I did not encounter any flaxen chestnuts in my lines until after I added flaxen to my lines. I had had silver in my lines for several generations prior to flaxen chestnut.
How would one prove that this is NOT caused by silver?
Breed the 'silver' flaxen chestnuts with bay or black horses. Select the resulting foals that are black or bay WITHOUT silver. Breed these non-silver black/bay foals together. If any of the resulting foals are flaxen chestnut, then it is proven that the flaxen is NOT caused by silver.
F1: e/e flaxen x E/E z/z - horse to use as e/e flaxen colt that is flaxen chestnut (BETTER OPTION), need to produce an E/E z/z
F2: E/e z/z
F3: select all e/e foals
How to prove that it is silver:
Breed together two E/e z/z horses. Select any resulting foals that are e/e. Breed these foals together and ensure that no foals resulting are flaxen (this is to eliminate the possibility of fl being carried.) Select foals that are e/e z/z Fl/Fl. Have a horse that is E/e and Z/Z. Breed to the e/e z/z Fl/Fl. Observe any resulting e/e foals, if silver does cause flaxen, then all resulting foals should be flaxen.
F1: E/e z/z
F2: e/e Fl/Fl
F3: e/e Fl/Fl z/z x E/e Z/Z
F4: e/e Z/z
Example 1, Bad Cruiser
Parents are sire: wild bay (confirmed no silver), dam: chestnut (no flaxen)
This individual is potentially heterozygous silver through her damsire.
Part of her lineage does involve a long line of chestnuts. However, none of these chestnuts have ever produced a silver excepting one case where a non-flaxen, chestnut male was bred to a known silver.
There is no possible way that this flaxen was caused by silver.
If a flaxen chestnut were caused by silver and required only one silver to express, then the dam would also have been chestnut flaxen.
If a flaxen chestnut could be caused by silver but required two copies of silver, then the offspring would NOT be flaxen, as it is only possible for her to have, at most, one copy of silver, as her sire is not silver.
This flaxen stallion has been bred to my Boerperd mares. Results:
This grey on chestnut filly, out of a bay
Palomino colt, out of a palomino (deleted due to being inadequate for my overall breeding project.)
Palomino colt, out of a buckskin:
Flaxen chestnut colt, out of a wild bay (may be deleted later due to possessing tiger eye as I do not want that in my overall project): NB, if this flaxen is caused by silver, this foal disproves that homozygous silver is necessary
A grey on silver bay pearl colt, out of a grey on seal dam - this indicates to me that the chestnut stallion carries silver in addition to being fl/fl (this horse will be culled at a later date as he is unsuitable for my breeding project):
I don't feel like getting the images of the other foals so I shall simply type it out - note that some foals may be deleted at some point due to their unsuitability to my actual breeding project.
Grey palomino filly
Grey bay colt
Grey chestnut colt
Flaxen chestnut filly
Red Dun colt
Chestnut filly
Flaxen chestnut filly
Silver buckskin pearl filly
Palomino colt
Chestnut filly
Grey bay filly
Flaxen chestnut colt
Grey palomino pearl colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Wild bay colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Silver wild bay colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Chestnut filly
Silver dunskin pearl colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Palomino pearl filly
Chestnut colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Grey silver bay filly
Flaxen chestnut colt
Aim: to prove that silver has no effect on chestnut
Notes for self on silver and flaxen
We know that silver is dominant and thus only requires one gene to express. Thus, any black- or bay-based horse with silver will express it. One would assume that the silver would still act as a dominant gene when combined with chestnut (if it did cause flaxen.) However, perhaps like tiger eye and champagne, it is dominant when combined with E and recessive when combined with e/e.
A potential argument might arise that perhaps whether silver causes flaxen chestnut might be due to multiple genes (like Lp and PATN1. or the tobiano pattern genes and To switch) To which I would argue: is it not a simpler explanation that the horses have the flaxen (fl) gene and that a line that carries silver co-incidentally carries recessive flaxen - which is independent of silver - than that there are mysterious silver related genes causing chestnut flaxens when we know that silver has no affect on red hairs in real life and that this game attempts realism wherever possible?
I did not encounter any flaxen chestnuts in my lines until after I added flaxen to my lines. I had had silver in my lines for several generations prior to flaxen chestnut.
How would one prove that this is NOT caused by silver?
Breed the 'silver' flaxen chestnuts with bay or black horses. Select the resulting foals that are black or bay WITHOUT silver. Breed these non-silver black/bay foals together. If any of the resulting foals are flaxen chestnut, then it is proven that the flaxen is NOT caused by silver.
F1: e/e flaxen x E/E z/z - horse to use as e/e flaxen colt that is flaxen chestnut (BETTER OPTION), need to produce an E/E z/z
F2: E/e z/z
F3: select all e/e foals
How to prove that it is silver:
Breed together two E/e z/z horses. Select any resulting foals that are e/e. Breed these foals together and ensure that no foals resulting are flaxen (this is to eliminate the possibility of fl being carried.) Select foals that are e/e z/z Fl/Fl. Have a horse that is E/e and Z/Z. Breed to the e/e z/z Fl/Fl. Observe any resulting e/e foals, if silver does cause flaxen, then all resulting foals should be flaxen.
F1: E/e z/z
F2: e/e Fl/Fl
F3: e/e Fl/Fl z/z x E/e Z/Z
F4: e/e Z/z
Example 1, Bad Cruiser
Parents are sire: wild bay (confirmed no silver), dam: chestnut (no flaxen)
This individual is potentially heterozygous silver through her damsire.
Part of her lineage does involve a long line of chestnuts. However, none of these chestnuts have ever produced a silver excepting one case where a non-flaxen, chestnut male was bred to a known silver.
There is no possible way that this flaxen was caused by silver.
If a flaxen chestnut were caused by silver and required only one silver to express, then the dam would also have been chestnut flaxen.
If a flaxen chestnut could be caused by silver but required two copies of silver, then the offspring would NOT be flaxen, as it is only possible for her to have, at most, one copy of silver, as her sire is not silver.
This flaxen stallion has been bred to my Boerperd mares. Results:
This grey on chestnut filly, out of a bay
Palomino colt, out of a palomino (deleted due to being inadequate for my overall breeding project.)
Palomino colt, out of a buckskin:
Flaxen chestnut colt, out of a wild bay (may be deleted later due to possessing tiger eye as I do not want that in my overall project): NB, if this flaxen is caused by silver, this foal disproves that homozygous silver is necessary
A grey on silver bay pearl colt, out of a grey on seal dam - this indicates to me that the chestnut stallion carries silver in addition to being fl/fl (this horse will be culled at a later date as he is unsuitable for my breeding project):
I don't feel like getting the images of the other foals so I shall simply type it out - note that some foals may be deleted at some point due to their unsuitability to my actual breeding project.
Grey palomino filly
Grey bay colt
Grey chestnut colt
Flaxen chestnut filly
Red Dun colt
Chestnut filly
Flaxen chestnut filly
Silver buckskin pearl filly
Palomino colt
Chestnut filly
Grey bay filly
Flaxen chestnut colt
Grey palomino pearl colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Wild bay colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Silver wild bay colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Chestnut filly
Silver dunskin pearl colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Palomino pearl filly
Chestnut colt
Grey flaxen chestnut filly
Grey silver bay filly
Flaxen chestnut colt
-
- Premium
- Visit My Farm
- Posts: 261
- Joined: Sat Sep 03, 2016 6:44 am
- Visit My Farm
Re: RSÆ project
Post by Malakai20 »
Collection of my flaxen reds:
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3112260
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199518
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3465238
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3465225
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199429
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199439
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3568573
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199461
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199463
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3748324
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3936219
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3749668
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4133994
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3112260
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199518
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3465238
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3465225
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199429
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199439
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3568573
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199461
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199463
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3748324
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3936219
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/3749668
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4133994
-
- Premium
- Visit My Farm
- Posts: 261
- Joined: Sat Sep 03, 2016 6:44 am
- Visit My Farm
Re: RSÆ project
Post by Malakai20 »
NB to self, thing to look at later:
Hypothesis: shade and desaturation are incomplete dominant genes and you get dark shade (DS/DS), mid shade (DS/ds), light shade (ds/ds), saturated tone (ST/ST), mid tone (ST/st) and desaturated tone (st/st)
Hypothesis: shade and desaturation are incomplete dominant genes and you get dark shade (DS/DS), mid shade (DS/ds), light shade (ds/ds), saturated tone (ST/ST), mid tone (ST/st) and desaturated tone (st/st)
-
- Premium
- Visit My Farm
- Posts: 261
- Joined: Sat Sep 03, 2016 6:44 am
- Visit My Farm
Re: RSÆ project
Post by Malakai20 »
How would one prove that this is NOT caused by silver?
Breed the 'silver' flaxen chestnuts with bay or black horses. Select the resulting foals that are black or bay WITHOUT silver. Breed these non-silver black/bay foals together. If any of the resulting foals are flaxen chestnut, then it is proven that the flaxen is NOT caused by silver.
F1: e/e flaxen x E/E z/z - horse to use as e/e flaxen colt that is flaxen chestnut (BETTER OPTION), need to produce an E/E z/z
F2: E/e z/z
F3: select all e/e foals
E/e stud - has been confirmed E/e as he has is black but has sired chestnut foals
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4202920
Flaxen chestnut mare https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199463
Breed the 'silver' flaxen chestnuts with bay or black horses. Select the resulting foals that are black or bay WITHOUT silver. Breed these non-silver black/bay foals together. If any of the resulting foals are flaxen chestnut, then it is proven that the flaxen is NOT caused by silver.
F1: e/e flaxen x E/E z/z - horse to use as e/e flaxen colt that is flaxen chestnut (BETTER OPTION), need to produce an E/E z/z
F2: E/e z/z
F3: select all e/e foals
E/e stud - has been confirmed E/e as he has is black but has sired chestnut foals
https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4202920
Flaxen chestnut mare https://www.horseworldonline.net/horse/profile/4199463
Jump to
- General Discussion
- ↳ Announcements
- ↳ Weekly Development Updates
- ↳ General Chit Chat
- ↳ Contests
- ↳ What Colour Is My Horse?
- ↳ Comments and Suggestions
- ↳ Suggestions Archive
- ↳ Breeding Communities
- ↳ Farm Logs
- Marketplace
- ↳ Horses for Sale
- ↳ Stallions at Stud
- Knowledgebase & Guides
- ↳ Gameplay Questions & Help
- ↳ Guides & How To
- Technical
- ↳ Change Log v3
- Guest Discussions
- ↳ Public Questions & Answers