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  2. Grullo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grullo

    Silver grulla may also refer to a grulla horse with silver dapple, regardless of shade. [4] A Heck horse. In terms of equine coat color genetics, all of these shades are based on the dun gene acting as a dilution gene over the black gene. Because the grulla color is not due to the gray gene, a grulla horse remains the same basic color from ...

  3. Equine coat color - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_coat_color

    Palomino: chestnut horse that has one cream dilution gene that turns the horse to a golden, yellow, or tan shade with a flaxen or white mane and tail. Often cited as being a color "of twenty-two carat gold", [ 5 ] palominos range in shades from extremely light, almost cremello, to deep chocolate, but always with a white or flaxen mane and tail.

  4. Cream gene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cream_gene

    Smoky grulla, silver grulla or smoky black dun: a black-based coat with one cream allele and at least one dun allele. The effect is of an extra-pale grulla. Double-cream champagne: any blue-eyed cream horse that also carries the champagne gene. The champagne traits are, in the few known individuals, not visible.

  5. Dun gene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dun_gene

    The Fjord horse breed, which is predominantly dun, uses unique Norwegian-based terminology to distinguish between the different shades of dun horses. "Brown dun", or brunnblakk is a zebra dun, rødblakk is a red dun, grå - literally "gray" - is a grullo, buckskin duns are called ulsblakk or white dun, and a "dunalino" (dun + palomino ) is ...

  6. Equine coat color genetics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Equine_coat_color_genetics

    Visually, the horse may be any color other than the cream dilute shades of palomino, buckskin, smoky black, cremello, perlino, smoky cream, and so on. C Cr /C heterozygous. The colors most commonly associated with this genotype are palomino, buckskin, and smoky black, though the phenotype may vary depending on other factors.

  7. Primitive markings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primitive_markings

    This horse's dorsal stripe is most likely caused by non-dun 1. Less distinct primitive markings can also occur on non-dun horses, even in breeds which are not known to have any dun individuals. The most common primitive marking found is a dorsal stripe. [1] Most non-dun horses do not have darker primitive markings, but some do.

  8. Grulla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grulla

    Grulla may refer to: Grulla Morioka, a Japanese football (soccer) club; Grulla National Wildlife Refuge, wildlife refuge in New Mexico; Grulla, Texas, small town in southern Texas; Grullo, a color of horses in the dun family; Grullos, one of eleven parishes in Candamo, Spain

  9. Silver dapple gene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_dapple_gene

    Horses with chestnut or chestnut-family coats - such as palomino, red roan, or red dun - are therefore unaffected by the gene and may silently carry it and pass it on to their offspring. On the template of a black horse, which has a coat rich in eumelanin, the effect is that of complete conversion to varying shades of silver.