BARLESS DRAGOON
(If color name is highlighted at the beginning of its
description, click on it to see a picture.)

BARLESS: Barless is an autosomal recessive gene. "Autosomal" means it's not
on the sex chromosome, and "recessive" means the bird must possess two of
these genes (one from each parent) for the characteristic to be visible. A
barless blue pigeon looks like an ordinary blue bar or blue check, except it
does not possess the black markings (bars or checks) on the wingshields.
Barless ash red (homer men call it "barless silver") looks like an ordinary
silver red bar, but without the red bars. Such birds are often confused with
spread ash, which looks very similar to barless ash. They are completely
different genetically, however. If you have what you think is a barless ash
red, you can test to see if it is really genetically barless by mating it to
a blue of any pattern. If you ever obtain any black youngsters out of such
a pairing, you can be sure that your ash is actually the spread factor rather
than barless. (Black is the same as "spread blue.") If you obtain only
birds that look like the ash parent, you can also be sure it is not barless
because barless is recessive and if barless is mated to a bird that is
barred or checkered and the latter does not carry the gene for barless,
the young cannot be barless. Back to top of page

INDIGO: Indigo is an autosomal
dominant gene. Since
it is dominant, any bird that carries it will show it
and therefore it is very easy to follow. Indigo, in its
heterozygous state, gives a blue pigeon a purplish hue and
changes the bars or checks from black to a plum color.
It also washes out the tail bar so instead of being
black the tail bar is lighter than the rest of the tail.
Indigo combined with black (blue plus the spread factor)
yields the typical "Andalusian Blue" seen in many breeds.
In the homozygous state, indigo on a blue base
mimics ash red, and such a bird resembles an ash red
with a slightly darker ground color. On a black base,
homozygous indigo yields a bird with a near-white ground
color and darker lacing.
Indigo in combination with brown gives a bird that very closely
resembles an ash red, but with richer wing markings and
some tell-tale lacing on upper tail coverts. Indigo with
ash red is virtually indistinguishable from ash red,
although when combined with spread often gives a rich
mahogany effect.
It has been noted by several fanciers and reported in the
literature that indigo noticeably enriches the color of
recessive red.Back to top of page

DOMINANT OPAL: Dominant opal is an autosomal dominant
gene. It is extremely variable in its expression,
ranging from slight washing out of the bar and check
pattern all the way to white bars and checks. At the
same time the tail bar may be washed out or it may be
nearly black. One way to identify dominant opal is by
the light-colored shaft of the tail feathers. The most
common expression of dominant opal is a light greyish-brown
in place of the normal black bars or checkering. Another
common effect is that the normal blue groundcolor lightens
up to a steely gray. The white bar or white check effect
is more likely to occur if the gene is in combination
with indigo, although that combination does not always
yield the same results.
Dominant opal in combination with ash-red is often
indistinguishable from ordinary ash red. When combined
with black the results range from a very attractively
laced bird with silvery groundcolor, to an overall
gun-metal gray, all the way to what
has sometimes been described as "dark mud" which is a
washed out black with some lightening effects near the
base of the feathers.Back to top of page

RECESSIVE OPAL: Recessive opal is another autosomal recessive gene. It
causes the bars and checks, as well as the tail bar, on an otherwise blue pigeon to become much
lighter. That lightening effect is extremely variable, and the wing
markings can range anywhere from a medium grey rather than black, to a
greyish-tan, to a "bronzy" black, to a pink or reddish hue. The last often mimics the color
of ash red, including the absence of a tail bar. When this happens, some fanciers are led to believe that
they have produced a red check out of a pair of blue checks, which is
genetically impossible. In such a case the checkering on the wingshield is often edged in gray. If such a psuedo-red check (or pseudo-silver) is mated to a blue that
does not carry the gene for recessive opal, all young will be blues. It is not uncommon for the inexperienced fancier to confuse recessive opal with dominant opal. Click here to see a photo of the red phase of recessive opal.
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SMOKEY: Smokey is the gene responsible for what most
Racing Homer flyers call "slate". It is a simple autosomal
recessive that is very common in homers. This gene causes
the normal blue pigment to wash out to the point that the
bird's ground color is a duller gray than the normal blue-gray
of a blue bar or blue check. It also causes the pattern on
the wingshield, as well as the tail bar, to be less
well-defined. The gene got its name when someone commented
that it looked as if the pigeon was being viewed through a
thick layer of smoke. One of the tell-tale signs of smokey
is that the albescent (white) strips along the outer edges
of the two outer tail feathers are not there. Also, smokey
pigeons will usually have a much lighter beak than that of
an ordinary blue pigeon. Smokey in the presence of ash red
is believed to be responsible for some of the "plum" colored
reds seen in some lofts. The smokey gene is believed to be
very common in the Janssen and Trenton strains of Racing
Homers. It is also common in Russian Tumblers and several
other breeds.
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REDUCED: Reduced is a sex-linked recessive gene. Since it is sex-linked, it
need occur just once in hens (hens have only one "active" sex chromosome),
but in cocks it must occur twice. Reduced causes blue pigeons to have a light,
frosty ground color - often with a silvery crescent on the crop area - with
pinkish-colored bars and checks. Reduced checkers are the most attractive.
Reduced barless are the least attractive, because they have no bars or checks
to show off the effects of this gene. Reduced ash red in either bar or check
pattern gives the closest thing I have seen to a pink pigeon.
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DILUTE: Dilute is also a sex-linked recessive gene. It changes a blue pigeon
to a "true" silver (as opposed to the silver of the racing homer, which is
actually ash red bar), or as many US racing homer men call it, "dun bar" or
"dun check". An ash red dilute is a yellow check or cream bar, and a brown
dilute is a khaki, which in the bar and check patterns is often confused
with dilute ash red. The former, however, will always show a dark tail
bar while the latter will have a lighter tail bar or no tail bar at all.
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RECESSIVE RED AND RECESSIVE YELLOW: Recessive red is
an autosomal recessive gene which masks the underlying
basic color (blue-black, ash-red, or brown) and pattern.
It causes the pigeon to take on a fairly uniform rust
or red-brown coloration. Ideal recessive
red coloration is uniform throughout, with the flight
feathers and tail the same shade as the rest of the
bird. (A good example is the red
Carneau or the red schietti Modena.) However, such
ideal coloration requires some
additional modifying genes, not all of which have been
positively identified. It is claimed by many fanciers
that indigo quite noticeably improves the color, and the
spread factor does likewise. (The best colored recessive
red Racing Homer I ever owned was also spread and indigo.)
Many recessive reds possess a
smuttiness that dulls the color, and the tail is more
brown than red. This is particularly true in recessive
red Racing Homers, where the emphasis is on performance
rather than on color. Recessive yellow is the combination
of the recessive red gene with the gene for dilution,
which is also recessive (see above). Recessive yellows
are not really yellow, but more of a rich tan similar to
the "buff" found in chickens. Many recessive reds and yellows, particularly among Racing Homers, exhibit a white mottling or "splash" effect on the wingshields and head, and the cause of such mottling has not been firmly established.
Click here to access an article I wrote concerning the inheritance of the mottling effect seen in many recessive red homers.
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WHITE: White is a complicated subject for the simple
reason that a white pigeon may be the result of several
genetic factors. For example, homozygous grizzle
causes a blue pigeon to be stork-marked (white body with
some coloring on the flights and tail feathers), but a
homozygous grizzle ash red is almost pure white, with
perhaps a few very light red feathers visible upon close
inspection. Such whites can usually be distinguished
from other genetic combinations because they will have
orange eyes rather than the "bull" eyes of many whites.
Other whites are the result of one or more of the
genes that cause a bird to be pied, and the particulars
of some of these genes have not yet been worked out.
Examples would be the saddle, whiteside, baldhead, Lahore,
and other patterns.
It has been established, however, that many whites
are the result of a specific gene for "recessive white".
Such a gene has been identified in the various "homer"
breeds: Racing Homers, American Giant Homers, German
Beauty Homers, Dragoons, etc. Recessive white is
believed by some to be at the same locus as the gene for
the gazzi pattern, which has been shown to be a simple
recessive, and recessive white is
epistatic (see "epistasis" below) to all other colors
and patterns, a possible exception being recessive red.
(I am unaware of any research concerning the combination
of those two genes.) The action of recessive white is
identical to that of recessive red in that if a pair of
recessive whites are mated together, all young are
recessive white. If a recessive white is mated to a
self-colored bird that does not carry the recessive white
gene, all young are colored. If two colored birds
carrying the recessive white gene are mated, the offspsring
exhibit the classic 1:2:1 Mendelian ratio, which is: 1
white, 2 colored birds carrying white, and 1 colored bird
that does not carry white. Most, if not all, recessive
whites have dark or "bull" eyes.Back to top of page

"SEX-LINKED" MATINGS: A sex-linked mating is a mating of
two pigeons whose sex-linked color characteristics
(dilution, reduced, almond, faded, Quinn-mutant, along
with the three "basic" colors of blue-black, brown, and
ash-red) are such that the gene for the hen's particular
sex-linked characteristic
is dominant to the cock's corresponding gene for that characteristic.
When this happens, all youngsters having the mother's
color will be cocks and all young having the sire's
color will be hens. In other words, in a sex-linked
mating the young are just the opposite color of the
parents. The reason for this is that the cock has two
active sex chromosomes (one from each parent) and the
hen has only one that is active. She receives her sex
chromosome from her sire only; hence her color must be
inherited strictly from him. Since the young cock receives
one chromosome from each parent, and since in a sex-linked
mating the mother's color is the dominant one, the son
must appear the color of his mother. (He will carry the
sire's color on the other chromosome and is capable of
passing it on to later generations.) Examples of sex-linked
matings in which the young have just the opposite colors
of their parents include, but are not limited to: Blue
cock x ash-red hen; Brown cock x ash-red or blue hen;
Non-almond cock x almond hen; dilute cock (dun, yellow,
"true" silver or silver-dun-bar, cream, etc.) x intense
(blue-black, ash-red, brown) hen. Indigo, dominant and
recessive opal, toy stencil, etc. are not
sex-linked characteristics and therefore these principles don't
apply to them.
Click here for a more detailed discussion of sex linkage.
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THE PATTERN SERIES: The pattern series consists of
T-pattern (sometimes called "velvet"), checker, bar, and
barless, in descending order of dominance. That is,
anything later in this list is recessive to anything listed ahead of it.
Pattern is an autosomal characteristic and therefore is
controlled by 2 genes, one from each parent. A bird that
appears to be a T-pattern can carry any of the four
pattern genes (T-pattern, checker, bar or barless) on the second chromosome
but it appears T-pattern because T-pattern is
dominant to all the rest. A bird that
is checker can carry checker, bar or barless on the other chromosome,
but it appears checker because checker is dominant to bar and barless. It
cannot carry T-pattern because if it did it would appear T-pattern rather
than checker. Likewise a bar can carry bar or barless on the other chromosome,
but it cannot carry T-pattern or checker because if it did it would not be
a bar; it would be T-pattern or checker, due to the dominance of the latter.
A barless must be barless on both chromosomes because the gene for
barless is recessive to all the other pattern genes.
If a bird has the same pattern gene on both chromosomes we say the bird is
"homozygous" for that pattern. If a bird is homozygous for a given pattern and
is mated to a bird of another pattern that is recessive to it, all the young
will have the same pattern as the dominant parent, but will carry the gene
for the pattern of the recessive parent. Such youngsters are said to be
"heterozgous" for each pattern. If two heterozygotes are mated together we
get the classical 1:2:1 Mendelian pattern, which means 25% of those young will
be homozygous for the dominant gene, 50% heterozygous, and 25% homozygous
for the recessive gene. In appearance they will be 3:1, since only the one
that is homozygous for the recessive gene will show it.
Caution! The gene for spread, which makes a blue pigeon black, is NOT
part of the pattern series.Back to top of page

EPISTASIS: Sometimes you hear a statement such as "Recessive red is epistatic
to all other colors and to the pattern series." This simply means that
recessive red covers or hides all other colors or patterns. For example,
a recessive red may be genetically a bar or a checker, but one cannot tell
by looking at the bird because the pattern is hidden by the recessive red
gene. Recessive red also hides ("is epistatic to") the underlying sex-linked
color of blue-black, ash-red, or brown. The spread factor is epistatic to
the pattern on an otherwise blue pigeon, making it appear solid black.
The combination of both recessive red and spread often makes for a much
richer and more even shade of red.Back to top of page

"SILVER": I have placed the word "Silver" in quotes because within the
pigeon fancy it has two separate meanings.
To a geneticist and to breeders
of most fancy breeds, it means the same as dilute blue bar. This is an
ordinary "wild type" blue bar pigeon with the single recessive sex-linked
gene for dilute (homozygous, or two copies of the gene, in cocks; one copy
of the gene in hens). Such a bird has a light silvery ground color with
bars that are almost black. Racing Homer breeders often refer to this as
a "dun bar" or "silver dun bar". (See notes on "dilute", above.) Sometimes
a brown bar is called silver, but the bars of a brown are more chocolate
colored. Also, a brown will fade considerably with continued exposure to
sunlight, and usually will
have "false pearl" or pinkish tinted eyes. A true silver (dilute blue)
will fade with heavy exposure to sunlight, but not nearly as much as a
brown.
The term "silver", when used by Racing Homer breeders in the United
States, or breeders of
many of the show strains of the Racing Homer or the American Show Racer,
means the same as "silver red bar", which is simply an ash red bar pigeon
with clear ash wingshields and often with a "frosty" or silvery sheen to
the feathers on the neck. Note that in this case we are dealing with a
sex-linked dominant. If such a bird shows any smuttiness or dirtiness in
the wingshield area, it is usually referred to as a "mealy".
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ALMOND: "Classical" almond coloration is the color combination most often seen in the English Shortface Tumbler: golden ground color with haphazard flecking of black and lighter grey throughout. The color got its name from the fact that the ground color is supposed to be the same color as that of the inside of the shell of the almond nut. Unfortunately that classical color is actually the result of several genes: the almond gene plus T-pattern, kite bronze, and recessive red. The almond gene alone, which is sex-linked, simply is a "lightening" gene that cancels the effects of most pigments, making an otherwise blue pigeon look like a dirty white with a few dark flecks. Such birds are often mistaken for homozygous grizzle or some other mutation. For a much more thorough treatment of the almond complex, see the link to Frank Mosca's website below.
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CREST: Crest is another autosomal recessive gene that causes the feathers
on the back of the head to be reversed. One gene appears to be responsible
for the reversal of feathers, while additional "modifier" genes determine
whether the reversal appears as a "peak" crest as in Oriental Frills and
Archangels, or a "shell" crest as seen in Helmets, Nuns and English Trumpeters.
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WILD TYPE: The phrase "wild type", when used in genetics, simply means
the total gene package of an individual which has no mutations. It is a
reference point from which geneticists work. In the case of the pigeon,
it represents a blue bar bird of normal size, with clean legs, no crest
or frill, orange eyes, etc. In other words, it represents a bird resembling
the "wild type" rock dove, columba livia. "Wild type" in reference to the
pattern series means barred; "wild type" in reference to foot feathering
means clean legged; "wild type" in reference to basic color means blue; etc.
In discussing "wild type", many pigeon geneticists envision
a blue bar racing homer, although the racing homer is admittedly
not "wild type" when the homing instinct is considered.
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BROWN: Brown is a sex-linked recessive, which causes the
black areas on a "wild type" pigeon to become a chocolate
brown. It is often confused with the dilute of blue, or
what many refer to as "silver dun bar" or "true silver".
However, brown is intense, and brown youngsters will have
normal down when in the nest, unlike the short down of a
true silver. The dilute of brown is
Khaki. Khaki is often confused with cream, or ash yellow,
which is the dilute of ash red. Cream, however, does not
show a tail bar, and khaki always does. Both brown and
khaki are extremely susceptible to bleaching by sunlight,
whereas true silver and cream may show some bleaching but
nothing near the effect on brown. (See notes above,
under "dilute" and "silver".)
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copyright © 1997, 1999, 2001 Tom Barnhart
Link to Texan Pioneer
and a short note on autosexing
List of genetics symbols at Bob Mangile's genetics site
Link to Frank Mosca's genetics site
Link to Ron Huntley's rare color site
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