stripes

Status
Not open for further replies.

josie_angle

Boxer Pal
hi my femele boxer has had her puppies shes a fawn and the
the father is fawn also .but some of the babys have stripes on
theme , are the stripes going to fade or become more darker.
I but a pick in my gallery to show you. birthdayic
 

JulieM

Boxer Insane
Pics haven't been approved yet....

If the stripes are running along the spine, they'll disappear as the puppies' coats change. If the stripes are running down the side of the pup (in the direction of the ribs), some other male got to your girl! :eek:
 

harley03

Completely Boxer Crazy
If the stripes are running along the spine, they'll disappear as the puppies' coats change. If the stripes are running down the side of the pup (in the direction of the ribs), some other male got to your girl!
That is true.
Mating two fawns cannot produce brindle.
Are the stripes black or just a deeper shade of fawn?
 

meb0585

Boxer Booster
our fawn puppies were like theat when they were born, they will go away, ours are already gone and they are only 5 weeks
 

girls mom

Boxer Buddy
i never knew that

I never knew that breeding two fawns can't produce a brindle. If brindle runs in either of the lines then i thought a brindle could be produced. My sister had puppies, and she bred two very dark brindles and got a fawn. So is that normal? and my Mya is very reverse brindle, and in that litter there was fawn and even white.

--------------------------
Ashley, Cally and Mya
 
T

Tina&Derek

Guest
funny question

I have the same question above with my litter. I have a dark flashy brindle and I bred her to a fawn with a black mask......I have two dark fawns with light brindle markings which may fade??? and three fawn two with white collars and one with a white stripe between the eyes.

I was also wondering if the light brindle will fade because that's the one I would like....I love the brindle markings and he looks so much like his mom!!
 

Alisha Mobley

Boxer Insane
I was also wondering if the light brindle will fade because that's the one I would like....I love the brindle markings and he looks so much like his mom!!

Julie answered this question above...stripes running along the spine will disappear, stripes running down the sides (in the direction of the ribs) will not disappear.

Brindle stripes tend to spread out as a puppy grows. What this means is a puppy that looks like a reverse brindle can grow up to look like a "normal" brindle. In my gallery is a photo of Buck at 3 wks...he looks pretty dark. But, you can see in the photos of him at an older age he isn't dark at all. :)

If brindle runs in either of the lines then i thought a brindle could be produced.

No, a fawn Boxer does not carry the brindle gene...if it doesn't carry the gene, it can't pass it on. If it can't pass it on, it can't produce it. ;)

My sister had puppies, and she bred two very dark brindles and got a fawn. So is that normal?

Yes. This tells us that both brindle parents carry 1 copy of the fawn gene. The fawn puppy inherited a copy of the fawn gene from each parent. :)

and my Mya is very reverse brindle, and in that litter there was fawn and even white.

I don't know the color of Mya's parents but if a litter contains brindle, fawn and white we do know this... There was at last one brindle parent, both parents carried a copy of the fawn gene and both parents were genetically flashy.
 

Bar B

Boxer Booster
harley03 said:
That is true.
Mating two fawns cannot produce brindle.
Are the stripes black or just a deeper shade of fawn?


Are there exceptions to the rule. My bf`s male came from two fawn parents (with some flash) and I know there was one brindle in the litter however the majority of the litter was white. She only owned the female and a friend of ours owned the stud dog so how did she get a brindle pup? According to bf`s males pedigree all ancestors were fawn/fawn and white/fawn with white markings so I suppose maybe some hanky panky untruths may have been in the past generations but I do know what the parents were.
 

harley03

Completely Boxer Crazy
I suppose maybe some hanky panky untruths may have been in the past generations
Past generations do not matter in the case of 2 fawns.
The 2 fawn dogs you say were bred were either mixed, or another male bred to the bitch that they were not aware of.
 

Alisha Mobley

Boxer Insane
harley03 said:
Past generations do not matter in the case of 2 fawns.
The 2 fawn dogs you say were bred were either mixed, or another male bred to the bitch that they were not aware of.

Yes, or one of the parents were indeed a brindle...it only takes one stripe. One stripe can be over looked. ;)

Brindle is dominant...if a dog carries the gene it expresses it. A fawn does NOT carry the brindle gene because if it did, it would have stripes (and then would be called brindle ;) ). Like has already been said...if the gene isn't carried it can't be passed on. :)
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top