- Cremello
Cremello is a
horse coat color consisting of a cream colored body with a cream or white mane and tail. It occurs when a horse ishomozygous for adilution gene sometimes called thecream gene acting on a red (chestnut) base coat. Such horses have pink skin, blue eyes, and are a light cream or gold color when born, but sometimes fade to almost white as an adult.Cremellos are not white horses, which have a pure white coat from birth with brown or blue eyes and pink skin, and no genetic dilution factor. Cremellos do not carry any of the genes that produce true white coloring, thus they also will not carry any of the "lethal white" conditions, such as
lethal white syndrome . Cremello horses are also notalbino : they do not have a white hair coat nor do they have non-pigmented eyes. (True albinism has not been found in horses, it is also believed to be a lethal gene.)A horse who has a "red," or chestnut, base coat and is
heterozygous for the dilution gene, that is, has only a single copy of the gene, or a "single dilution" is apalomino . Most palominos have a golden coat with a white mane and tail, and usually have dark eyes (though occasional individuals have blue eyes due to other factors). A single dilution gene acting on a bay base coat produces abuckskin colored horse. ("see alsoperlino for more information on dilution genes on a bay base coat)The cremello gene can be found in any breed that also produces
palomino orbuckskin coloring, including theAmerican Quarter Horse andMorgan horse .Other dilution genes that sometimes resembles cremello include the
champagne gene and thepearl gene . However, champagne horses can be differentiated from cremellos by the presence of mottled skin, striping on the hooves, and eyes that darken from blue to yellow-green or hazel, and often a noticeably darker coat at birth. The pearl gene does not always dilute coat color, but can produce blue eyes with a single copy of the gene present and a copy of the pearl gene combined with the cream gene may produce a "pseudo-double dilute" that appears to be a cremello. When horses carry multiple dilution genes, precise color can be sorted out by genetic testing.References
* [http://www.vgl.ucdavis.edu/services/coatcolorhorse.php "Horse coat color tests"] from theUC Davis Veterinary Genetics Lab
* [http://www.vgl.ucdavis.edu/services/coatcolor.php "Introduction to Coat Color Genetics"] "from" Veterinary Genetics Laboratory, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis. Web Site accessed January 12, 2008ee also
*
dilution gene
*cream gene
*Perlino
*Palomino
*Buckskin
*Smoky black
*Smoky cream
*Equine coat color
*Equine coat color genetics External links
* [http://ultimatehorsesite.com/colors/index.html Equine Coat Color, Genetics, & Photos]
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