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The Paso Fino is a naturally gaited light horse breed dating back to horses imported to the Caribbean from Spain. Pasos are prized for their smooth, natural, four-beat, lateral ambling gait; they are used in many disciplines, but are especially popular for trail riding.
Buckskin. Cream dilution is an incomplete dominant gene that produces a lightened or "partial dilute" coat color when one copy of the allele is present and a fully dilute (or "double dilute") with two copies. The double cream dilute phenotypes overlap regardless of base coat color and often cannot be distinguished visually.
Silver buckskin: bay-based coat with one cream allele and at least one silver dapple allele. The effect varies, as silver dapple does not act on red coats, but the buckskin's golden tone is somewhat lost. Silver smoky black: black-based coat with one cream allele and at least one silver allele. The effect varies from chestnut-like to silver ...
The Puerto Rican Paso Fino has and average height of X. The Puerto Rican Paso Fino is prized for its smooth or fine step. The most common coat colors in the Puerto Rican Paso Fino as per registrations are bay, chestnut, buckskin, palomino, black, and gray in that order. visible coat patterns or markings are sabino, roan, and tobiano pinto patterns.
Brown Buckskin, is a result of the dilution effect of a single copy of the cream gene. Sometimes called smoky brown . The black areas of the seal brown coat are unaffected or slightly lightened, while the reddish areas are more golden.
Tiger eye has only been found in Puerto Rican Paso Fino horses. Horses of related breeds were tested (90 Colombian Pasos, 20 Mangalargas, 44 Lusitanos, and 42 Andalusian horses), and none were found to have either tiger eye allele. No obvious link between eye shade and coat color was seen, making this the first studied gene in horses to affect ...
Several horse breeds are considered gaited, including the Peruvian Paso, Paso Fino, Saddlebred, Missouri Fox Trotter, and Tennessee Walking Horse. [33] gallop The fastest natural gait. Like the canter, there is a moment during a gallop when all four hooves of the horse are off the ground, known as the moment of suspension.
Paso Fino Colombiano: Paso Fino Colombia: Trocha Pura Colombiana: Colombia: Trocha y Galope Reunido Colombiano: Cook Islands: local horse: Local horse Costa Rica: Caballo Costarricense de Paso: Costarricense de Paso Croatia: Akhal-Teke: Akhal-Teke Croatia: American quarter horse: Croatia: Araber: Croatia: Arabian horse: Arab Croatia: Arabian ...