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by gimme10mins on 14 April 2005 - 18:04
From my understanding Sable is a dominant gene. Is it possible to get a bicolor or black a red dog from two sable parents?

by PINERIDGE on 14 April 2005 - 18:04
I'm only going to say maybe -- if they have enough
puppies -- It's a odds thing - so if there are only
4 pups -- the odds are not in your favor -- but if there are 16 pups -- it increases your chances.
You might get a black if they carry ressive for black
and you might get a very dark bi color - but count on
sables - 99.9% You would most likely not get any
black/brown combinations. When I bred my very dark
bi-color to a sable stud - I got 8 sables and 1 dark
black/bi color -- only tan on him was around his pasterns -- and a tiny patch on his chest.
by eichenluft on 14 April 2005 - 18:04
Sable is dominant over all other colors. Every dog carries two color genes - if the dog is sable, then you know at least one of those two genes is sable. The other gene could be sable, black/tan (black/red), black, or bicolor. Every puppy receives one color gene from each parent. If the pup receives a sable gene from either parent, then that pup is sable. But, if both parents carry a black/tan, black or bicolor recessive and give one of those to the puppy and NOT a sable gene, then the pup could be black/tan or bicolor (or black if both parents give the pup a black gene each - black is always recessive and black dogs have two black genes and no other) - so in other words, the answer is "yes" it is possible to get bicolor or black/tan(red) puppies from two sable parents. It is NOT possible to get sable puppies from two non-sable parents.
by LuvCzechDawgz on 14 April 2005 - 22:04
Well said Molly ;-)
by MikeRussell on 14 April 2005 - 23:04
Yes, it is possible. In our "A" litter there were 3 bicolors and 5 sables. Both parents are sable.
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