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by joanro on 26 March 2017 - 16:03
Heritage this is what I said: "To get a sable in the litter, at least one parent must be sable. Are you sure the sire is black and tan and not tan point sable ( patterned sable which can appear like black saddle like the dog pictured)"
by altostland on 26 March 2017 - 16:03
by GSDHeritage on 26 March 2017 - 16:03
This is a good site
Color Genetics in the German Shepherd Dog
http://www.ddr-k9.com/colors.html
by joanro on 26 March 2017 - 16:03
by Swarnendu on 26 March 2017 - 18:03
Theoretically, two whites cannot produce anything other than whites, because both are homozygous recessive ee and will supply one e each to all their offsprings.
Homozygous ee will mask whatever colour the pups were to express because of their alleles in A locus, but these alleles are nevertheless carried, and may express whenever a white is mated with anything other than whites. So, a pairing of even Black & White CAN produce Sables, if the white is carrying sable.

by Reliya on 26 March 2017 - 18:03
by joanro on 26 March 2017 - 18:03
Relya, that's what I said. I was told on page one that I'm wrong. So I ask for proof that two white GSD will produce a sable colored pup.
by Swarnendu on 26 March 2017 - 18:03
I think Sunsilver had stated in a corrigendum that both parents weren't actually white, one was b&t.
by joanro on 26 March 2017 - 18:03
by Swarnendu on 26 March 2017 - 18:03
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