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by GSD Lineage on 16 October 2012 - 14:10
On the dogs from this database that were linked to, Beowulf is the only brindle with linebred decendands we can see. Too bad we don't have All the dogs ever born registered with pictures on this site. :-)
I would not be surprized if a brindle showed up in the GSD today. Hopefully they will document it well and we all get to read up and see pictures.
by beetree on 16 October 2012 - 15:10
http://www.pedigreedatabase.com/dog.html?id=491738

by GSD Lineage on 16 October 2012 - 16:10

Friedo looks to not have any descendants .... Too bad we have no image of his dam. He also looks to have a sadle with the brindle on the tan parts when the contrast is inceased on the image. Today I read they call that "Trindle" for Black/Tan/Brindle. some posts on this thread are great but you have me doing a lot of homework. The color testing lab sites don't allways tell us everything they know either.

by Elkoorr on 16 October 2012 - 16:10
I wrote them to see what test of their list for GSD coat color testing they suggest would show if there is the possibility of a hidden brindle. See if they write back; I might just send the girl in for fun. I know one thing for sure, she is purebred GSD.....nobody jumped the fence here....LOL
by beetree on 16 October 2012 - 16:10



by GSD Lineage on 16 October 2012 - 17:10
The following dogs in the US had it
Jem of Penllyn
Hollamor's Judd
Ona of Edgetowne
Gernda's Ludwig
and
I saw it a lot in the DDR lines and Working lines.
They also have some good looking dark sables with lighter circles around their eyes like Lord's Dam.
Lord vom Gleisdreieck
Note those Bicolors with lighter masks.
Elkoor, If you test please let us know what you find :-)

by Elkoorr on 16 October 2012 - 17:10
It not only looks like he has some brindle showing on his hind legs, but in the comments it is mentioned a wavy spinal coat. What is so interesting about it, my bitch shows exactly that decribed wavy spinal coat, which forms a zick-zack /\/\/\/ line over her back. She is also the mother of my striped pup.

by BlackthornGSD on 16 October 2012 - 18:10
Except for "bleedthrough" blacks... Do you think bleedthroughs are actually brindle? Even so, what explains the parents of said dogs *not* showing any brindle (even if the parents aren't black)?Brindle + aa (recessive black) - dog will be solid black (recessive black does not allow the production of phaeomelanin in the coat)
I still don't think that we'd see the brindle coloring "hiding" in black GSDs--because there are very few dogs who have a full line of solid black ancestors. And the brindle shows up--in some way--in all the other agouti patterns. So it doesn't make sense that it would "hide" that way--you'd see it in every litter, just about. I think you'd see it as an odd looking sable, too, in sable pups.
In addition, most brindle GSDs that are photographed come from either black-tan parentage or unknown parentage. The lines that carry the most incidence of recessive black don't seem to be throwing brindle pups... So, for most cases, I think it's not a case of a normal transmission of the Kbr gene down through generations of GSDs--I think this is extremely unlikely. I suspect either mutations or a recent brindle ancestor (Dutch shepherd, especially, nowadays) in almost every case of brindle "GSDs".
Christine

by Elkoorr on 16 October 2012 - 18:10

by GSD Lineage on 16 October 2012 - 19:10
1. red/cream dogs will never express brindle but can carry it and it will be seen in their black base progeny.
This means a white cream GSD could hide the brindle. Great Danes do not carry RED. They are black based so brinddle can't hide on them.
White/Cream shepherds can hide patterns like bicolor and brindle.
3. Some brindles turn all black as they get older. (Tricky)
4. the role any/all genes have in the amount of black in the brindle is not yet understood.
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