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Topic Dog Boards / General / Is he the dad
- By Sandie [gb] Date 13.02.07 18:48 UTC
L/W english springer mum and light coloured golden retriever, end result is
11 pups, 6 solid black with small white markings on chest and 5 black, tan and white with tan eyebrows.
I have seen the pups and they are gorgeous but I am unsure if the dad is the retriever. Owners assure me he is but how did the mix end up with black and mix colour pups, is this possible.
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 13.02.07 18:51 UTC
I'm not a geneticist, but they sound more like collie-crosses to me! I think I'd be wanting them DNA tested.
- By Isabel Date 13.02.07 18:57 UTC
I suppose it could be possible, liver, black, tan markings there are all in the make up of Springer Spaniels and I know you get some funny old mismarks when you breed particolour Cockers to solids.
I think if you are buying a cross breed though you can only take it on the basis of how they appear now and a bit of guess work because you never know how the combination of genes will turn out.  It rarely seems to be as simple as this from one parent, that from another :)
- By Goldmali Date 13.02.07 19:06 UTC
A Golden Retriever mixed with something else of a different colour to them WiLL give black puppies! Basically the Golden colour is genetically black,  it is a very similar gene so yes, mix a Golden to another colour and black is what you get. I had my accidental litter Golden x Malinois (Malinois is Fawn or Red with black mask), 4 pups were Brindle with black mask, 6 pups BLACK. Somebody else then had the exact same accidental cross and ALL the pups there were black.

Some of my puppy buyers there have had a hard time convincing people their dogs ARE half Golden and not half Labrador as people simply do not believe it. A couple were told outright I must have conned them! (Yes, for £50 a pup as well.......)
- By perrodeagua [gb] Date 13.02.07 19:08 UTC
I mated a black and white Spanish with a brown and ended up with brown tri's, I've never had tri's before in my breed!  He is quite cute though but not accepted in the breed :d
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 13.02.07 19:09 UTC
Wow! Thanks for that, Marianne. It just shows you're never too old to learn! :D
- By Goldmali Date 13.02.07 19:15 UTC
Well I didn't know until I was curious about my pups and started looking for answers. :)
- By ShaynLola Date 13.02.07 19:15 UTC
Very interesting, Marianne :)  I met a lady once who had a golden X  springer spaniel and he was jet black but I just assumed that the spaniel had been black/white but not necessarily so apparently :)
- By Goldmali Date 13.02.07 19:22 UTC
I've just changed my profile to add the (there) allowed link to my website, so if anyone wants to see the "Maligolds" they can be found on my website (there's a button to take you to the right pages) if you go look at my profile.
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 13.02.07 19:37 UTC
Wow again! :D I'd never have guessed their parentage, even if there was money offered! :D :D
- By Dakkobear [gb] Date 13.02.07 21:57 UTC
That was really fascinating Marianne - I always learn new stuff on here! :)
- By Sandie [gb] Date 13.02.07 19:16 UTC
The pup I have reserved is the image of a golden except he is black, he looks just like his dad as a puppy, we saw pictures. My first thought however was Rottie because of the other pups coloring but he looks nothing like one.
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 13.02.07 19:54 UTC
Whilst I'd be quite prepared to believe the blacks would be produced, tricolour in Collies is recessive so would have to be carried by one parent, so if the puppies are black, tan and white ... I'd be wondering.

Of course, if the owner has been daft enough not be sure who the father is, there could be one, two or more fathers!

M.
- By Isabel Date 13.02.07 20:14 UTC

>so would have to be carried by one parent


The dam :)
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 13.02.07 20:55 UTC
Oops, sorry Isabel - of course I should have typed BOTH parents, as with any recessive gene. I know it can be in the dam, but not in a retriever surely.

M.
- By Isabel Date 13.02.07 21:18 UTC
I'm not sure about Springers but I think in Cockers only one parent needs to carry the tricolour gene.
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 13.02.07 21:34 UTC
Certainly wouldn't care to say that the inheritance is the same in all breeds, but I think the 'Tan Mask & Trim' element on this page would disagree with you for Cockers, although I'm having trouble finding a site that expresses it more clearly.

http://www.thecockerspanielclub.co.uk/colours4.htm

All of the "..and White" colours may have a tan mask and trim if both of the parents carry the separate gene for this trait.

M.
- By Isabel Date 13.02.07 21:57 UTC
Yes, I see, perhaps the dogs I am thinking of have benefited from a parent where the gene was carried but not evident.  But that is a cocker to cocker mating can the same be applied when different breeds and genes combine? 
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 13.02.07 22:00 UTC
I believe so.

Recessive genes should never be underestimated - the number may not be bang on, but in one breed I believe they have been found to be carried recessively for 20+ generations.

M.
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 13.02.07 22:02 UTC Edited 13.02.07 22:05 UTC
The stud dog's breeder was surprised when there was a couple of livers in Clover's litter; the last liver on his side was 5 generations back, but the recessive had been passed down safely. :)
- By JaneS (Moderator) Date 14.02.07 09:43 UTC
No both Cocker parents have to carry the gene for tan markings to produce a tricolour - it's inherited in the usual way as a simple autosomal rececessive.
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 14.02.07 11:04 UTC
In answer to the original poster then, I suspect we're safe in assuming then that the Retriever may be the dad of some of these puppies, but is probably not the dad of them all.

M.
- By Sandie [gb] Date 14.02.07 17:07 UTC
If the pup I have chosen looks like a golden can I assume the dad is the golden, but what about the other pups and if there is more than one father how will this show up in pups.

I am even more confused,
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 14.02.07 17:09 UTC
I guess the honest answer to that is that, in choosing a dog from a crossbred litter, you pays your money and takes your chance! :D

M.
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 14.02.07 17:48 UTC
OK then, to clarify my thought processes while I was driving home ... unless someone can tell me I'm wrong? Always more than happy to be educated.

I would say that any puppies by Golden x ESS could ONLY be black, as there would be no recessive fawn/golden/yellow gene to match on the Mum's side. I guess this would work much as a chocolate lab and a yellow lab (neither carrying recessive genes for the other colour) would only produce black puppies?

Of course, without knowing the other father(s), that is not to say that all the black pups are sired by the Golden.

All of this leads to, as far as I can see, two scenarios for the woman selling the pups:

a) she has no idea how many or which dogs have mated her in-season bitch
b) she is not being entirely truthful with you

(Neither would make her someone I wanted to buy a puppy from, but that's just me.)

Anyway, hope all this mumbo jumbo has at least nearly answered your question.

M.

While we're on these conundrums, another one of these is one that Dane breeders have fallen foul of, particularly as black pups are hard to sell - fawn x blue will produce an entire litter of blacks.
- By Havoc [gb] Date 15.02.07 17:19 UTC
[I would say that any puppies by Golden x ESS could ONLY be black, as there would be no recessive fawn/golden/yellow gene to match on the Mum's side.

I'm not sure? I've come across alleged springer x cocker first crosses that have had golden / lemon colouring.
- By Jeangenie [gb] Date 14.02.07 19:21 UTC
A litter can have many fathers, but each pup will be the product of the bitch and one of the dogs who mated her.

It'd be interesting if the bitch, pups and golden retriever were all DNAed then they'd know for sure if another dog/s had got to her as well. You'd also know if the pup you've chosen is sired by the golden or not. :)
- By Lily Mc [gb] Date 14.02.07 20:35 UTC
That would be interesting Jan, but suspect the breeder is not the sort who cares and certainly wouldn't spend the money to do so.

M.
- By Sandie [gb] Date 13.02.07 20:22 UTC
The owner said she actually caught her retriever on the bitch and it was to late to seperate.
If I had not seen the mix coloured ones I would never have questioned as the solid blacks look just like dad.
- By jackyjat [ru] Date 13.02.07 20:25 UTC
Colleage at work has a l/w springer cross golden retriever and to be hones he looks very much like a flatcoat apart from the muzzle.  (There is also someone with a flatcoat newfoundland cross too).  He's solid black and a fine dog too.
- By waffy [gb] Date 13.02.07 21:49 UTC
Goldmali,just looked at your 'maligolds and they are all absolutely gorgeous.But Matilda is just stunning. :D
- By Goldmali Date 13.02.07 22:11 UTC
Matilda says thank you. :) She's the sweetest, gentle little girl you could imagine, even when she jumps up on you with her paws she does it SO gently you hardly feel her.
- By Anwen [gb] Date 14.02.07 23:16 UTC
Bit late with this but a litter I saw l/w Springer x black/tan Akita was 8 black & white puppies (looked like bad Pointers when they grew up!
Topic Dog Boards / General / Is he the dad

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