For background on colors generally, see equine coat color genetics.
A bay horse carries both the Extension gene (E) and the agouti gene (A). The extension gene, also cometimes called the "black" gene, adds black color to the coat and the agouti gene limits it to black points. If a horse lacks the agouti gene, it is completely black. If a horse lacks the extension (or black) gene, it will be chestnut or "sorrel", but may produce bays in breedings with black or bay horses.
If a horse carrying the extension and agouti genes additionally has a heterozygous creme gene, it will have the buckskin color, which is similar to bay except that red or brown areas are lightened to a yellow or gold color. If the horse has a homozygous cream gene, it will have a perlino color, where red areas appear nearly white.
Because the extension (E) gene and agouti (A) gene can be either heterozygous or homozygous, the extent to which a bay passes on its color varies widely from one horse to another depending on its genotype and that of its mate:
In many breeds all of these genotypes are fairly common, making bay breedings unpredictable without a prior blood test for color-related genes.
The following grid shows the two-gene Punnett square for a crossing of two Ee Aa bays, just one of the many possibilities outlined above. Each of the sixteen squares is equally likely. Nine of the results carry both genes (bays), three carry extension but not agouti (blacks), and four do not carry extension (sorrels):
| e a | e A | E a | E A | |
| e a | ee aa | ee Aa | Ee aa | Ee Aa |
| e A | ee Aa | ee AA | Ee Aa | Ee AA |
| E a | Ee aa | Ee Aa | EE aa | EE Aa |
| E A | Ee Aa | Ee AA | EE Aa | EE AA |
Beja | Ruunikko | 鹿毛 | Brun (häst)
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Bay (color)".
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