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In this Discussion
- bluchrystals August 2019
- ichigo August 2019
- kgstable August 2019
- LEAcres August 2019
- Nikkel666 August 2019
- SharayahStables August 2019
- SilverCreekFarm August 2019
- Taliesin August 2019
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- CrescentMoonFarm 8:44PM
Hear me out... Conspiracy theory here
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This is just a funny thought I had but I've noticed an increase in lined brindle... How awesome would it be of the BR1 gene (a DNA testable and recognize inherited brindle gene by UCDavis) was secretively being brought into the game?!
**DISCLAIMER - in no way am I assuming this is what it's happening but it's so weird how lined brindle has blown up in the last 2 seasons!Post edited by LEAcres at 2019-08-03 11:34:12 -
I was thinking about that last night.. at least how I wish a form of brindle was heritable (at least moreso than the odds of it now LOL).
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I noticed that too :-? I NEVER got a brindle 2g until last season, this season I haven't tried much for brindle but I've seen so many other players getting brindle. It'd be so sneaky if Ammit snuck it in haha but you're right there can be no assuming, maybe everyones luck has been getting better lately :))
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This is what UCDavis says about BR1The molecular basis of a striped coat texture pattern that produces a brindle phenotype in a lineage of Quarter Horses has been identified by researchers in Switzerland. To avoid confusion with the spontaneous, not heritable brindle pattern associated with chimerism, the coat texture pattern has been named Brindle 1 (BR1). The stripes form a vertical pattern from the back to the sides of horses that is characterized by changes in hair structure as well as pigmentation. The hairs from the stripes are less straight and unrulier than hairs from the normally pigmented and textured coat. The BR1 phenotype is variable in that in some females, the predominant feature is the coat texture change while in others it can be the striped pigmentation. Males with BR1 mutation have sparse manes and tails but not the texture pattern. The BR1 phenotype can occur in any color background and shows seasonal changes (summer versus winter), with winter coat often having a “moth-eaten” appearance. The BR1 phenotype has an X-linked, semi-dominant mode of inheritance. Females with 1 copy of the BR1 mutation have the brindle phenotype. Females with 2 copies of the BR1 mutation (BR1/BR1) and BR1 males (only 1 X-chromosome present) have sparse manes and tails but not the striped coat texture pattern.
I feel if this was a possibility to add to the game, it would be a game changer! It would be so fun to see it and accordingly to real BR1! There's a Facebook page I've been following and I absolutely love their brindle!
https://www.facebook.com/Justa-Brindle-Horse-Farms-119836958033048/ -
When Ammit was teasing for Onyx I thought it would be the BR1 or some genetic brindle coloration, I wonder if she'd give it a thought? It would likely lower the value of true mosaic brindles in the game, and we'd have stripey horses everywherrrrreeee
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That’s such a cool page @Bambi!
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That is true @Ichigo
There would have to be some kind of compromise to try to keep brindle value.. -
A purchasable gene, that isn't in the GMT lab, should cut down on the popularity slightly.
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Not gonna lie, I hope it's not anything but good luck. I like brindles being a super rare exciting treat! And it can't be BR1 with the same inheritance pattern, or certain mares would be having solidly 50% brindle babies, and studs like Zephyr who are suddenly producing all these brindles would be having 100% brindle daughters (and no brindle sons unless it came from the mother). Zephyr's producing a ridiculous amount of brindles at 4 out of like 100 breedings (this is a guess, since I don't know how many he's had that have been yummed or auctioned, but he's got 77 foals right now, so I'd guess it's actually more), so he's running at like 4% or less, and he's producing more of them then about anybody that I've heard of.
Maybe Ammit just made brindles slightly more likely? Or more likely if one or both parents are brindles? It's seems like most lined brindles are out of two brindle parents, and a few from one brindle and one non, but almost none from all non brindles, so that's gotta increase the the likelihood somehow.Spiderweb Stables
ID Number: 238452
He/Him pronouns -
(Assuming it was being simplified to Brindle/not Brindle, vs the different hom and het phenotypes)Spiderweb Stables
ID Number: 238452
He/Him pronouns -
Very good point @Natalya.. maybe a raise in brindle percentage happened! All I know though is I love seeing these new babies
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Foals coming from a brindle parent have always been *slightly* more likely to come out brindle.
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No, I know, I meant maybe that's the percentage that got increased, if anything did. Because I haven't seen any brindles with non-brindle parents (lately or ever, really) but the numbers of brindles throwing brindles seems to be going up. I phrased it badly, sorrySpiderweb Stables
ID Number: 238452
He/Him pronouns -
maybe they are not becomimg more common, but are being posted about more often on the forums? my lined brindles have been about steady for the last few RL yearsHJ1: 133971
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So I did a bit of digging and it seems there is roughly 3 pages worth of lined foals born each season with the number being between 60 and 70 foals... At least for the last 15 seasons... There's a few pages here and there that are 2 pages