Predict offspring coat colors based on parent rabbit genetics using Mendelian inheritance patterns
For Breeders: Accurate color prediction requires knowing both parents' full genotypes, including recessive genes. Consider genetic testing or maintaining detailed breeding records.
Rabbit coat color genetics represents one of the most complex and fascinating examples of Mendelian inheritance in domestic animals, involving multiple genes that interact to produce the stunning variety of colors and patterns seen in rabbit breeds. Understanding color genetics helps breeders predict offspring colors, avoid undesirable combinations, and work toward specific breeding goals. The genetics also provides insight into basic principles of heredity that apply across many species. Rabbit color is controlled by at least five major gene loci, each with multiple alleles arranged in dominance hierarchies. These genes control factors including the presence or absence of color pigment, the type of pigment produced, the distribution of pigment along individual hairs, and overall color intensity or dilution patterns.
The C gene (color series) is particularly important, controlling whether pigment is produced at all and the type of pigmentation that occurs. This locus has multiple alleles in a dominance series: C (full color) is completely dominant and produces normal pigmentation throughout the coat. The cchd allele produces chinchilla coloring by removing yellow pigment while keeping dark pigment. The cchl allele creates sable coloring with light-colored extremities. The ch allele produces Himalayan pattern with white body and colored points on nose, ears, feet, and tail (similar to Siamese cats). The c allele is fully recessive and produces albino rabbits with no pigment—red eyes and white fur. A rabbit's genotype determines which colors it can produce—for example, a Himalayan rabbit must have two copies of the ch allele, while a full-color rabbit could be CC, Ccchd, Ccchl, Cch, or Cc, all showing full color but carrying different potential for offspring colors.
Predicting offspring colors requires understanding both parents' genotypes, which isn't always obvious from their physical appearance (phenotype). A black rabbit could be carrying genes for chocolate, dilute, or other hidden traits that only express when paired with another rabbit carrying the same recessive genes. Using Punnett squares, you can calculate probability of different offspring colors. For example, breeding two black rabbits both heterozygous for chocolate (both Bb genotype) produces a 25% probability of chocolate offspring (bb), a 50% probability of black offspring carrying chocolate (Bb), and a 25% probability of black offspring not carrying chocolate (BB). The complexity multiplies when considering multiple gene loci simultaneously—a rabbit's full color genotype might be notated as Aa Bb CC Dd Ee, representing genotypes at five different color gene locations. Serious breeders maintain detailed genetic records across multiple generations to understand hidden genotypes and predict breeding outcomes accurately.
Kalkylatorer för fåglar, kaniner, hamstrar, marsvin och andra smådjur
Explore CategoryPattern versus solid coloring is primarily controlled by the A gene (agouti series) and the En gene (English spotting). The agouti gene determines whether hair has banding (wild-type agouti pattern with multiple colors on each hair) or is solid (self pattern with single color throughout). The En gene creates broken patterns with colored patches on white background, with specific patterns named according to the amount of color versus white. Modifying genes also influence pattern expression, which is why rabbit color genetics can produce surprising results even when parents' genotypes are supposedly known.
Yes, depending on why the rabbits are white. Rabbits can be white due to different genetic mechanisms: albino (cc genotype), BEW (blue-eyed white, caused by the vienna gene), or REW (ruby-eyed white, another name for albino). If two white rabbits are white for different reasons—for example, one is albino and one is BEW—they could produce colored offspring if the colored genes are present but masked. Two true albinos (cc x cc) can only produce albino offspring. However, if a white rabbit carries one color gene and one albino gene (Cc), breeding to another Cc rabbit produces 25% colored offspring.
A false charlie is a rabbit that appears almost entirely white like a true charlie (which has genotype EnEn) but actually has genotype Enen—carrying only one copy of the English spotting gene rather than two. True charlies have very minimal color, typically just spots on the ears and perhaps a nose smudge. False charlies look similar but have slightly more color. The distinction matters for breeding because true charlies (EnEn) always produce patterned offspring regardless of mate, while false charlies (Enen) can produce both patterned and solid-colored offspring depending on their mate's genotype.
This occurs because black (B) is dominant over chocolate (b). Your chocolate rabbit has genotype bb (two recessive chocolate genes). If bred to a black rabbit carrying chocolate (Bb genotype), the offspring inheriting B from the black parent and b from the chocolate parent will be black (Bb) despite having a chocolate parent. Only offspring inheriting b from both parents (bb) will be chocolate. This illustrates why breeders must track genotypes across generations—a black rabbit might be BB (doesn't carry chocolate) or Bb (carries chocolate), and you can't tell by looking.
Color genes themselves don't directly control temperament or most health traits—these are influenced by different genes. However, some color-associated traits exist. True charlie rabbits (EnEn) have higher rates of megacolon, a serious digestive condition. The vienna gene causing blue eyes can be linked to deafness, particularly in rabbits with two copies. Albino rabbits may be more light-sensitive due to lack of eye pigment. But in general, coat color doesn't indicate personality or overall health. Temperament depends more on early socialization, handling, breed characteristics, and individual personality than genetics controlling color.