[Jacob-list] Answer about a white lamb

Jacobflock at aol.com Jacobflock at aol.com
Mon Apr 17 20:10:49 EDT 2000


Fred Horak substituting for Joan who is out of town and isn't on the machine!

The questions in this post about an all white lamb:  The post asks (1) what 
about the purity? (2) is it a sign of cross breeding? (3) All are JSBA 
registered..if JSC would white disqualify one or both his parents?

Might it make sense to rearrange some questions to get to the genotype?  

(1) Genotype questions first.  Let's look at the White lamb...Any black at 
all..nose, hooves, horns, spotted tongue, nape, eye ring like eye 
liner....etc. evidence of the presence of a recessive ss piebald gene.  All 
you need is a BLACK spot to "suggest" it is DOMINANT BLACK, and recessive ss. 
 The last places for black to remain before disappearing is nape of the neck, 
a miscule eye ring or face spot. 

Look at the parents and the percent white for the sire and dam,  then look at 
the percent white for the sire's sire and dam... and the dam's sire and 
dam...and then go back one more generation so you have the lamb back to great 
grand parents. The benefit of registration is the pedigree information.  Next 
calculate an inbreeding cofficient for the lamb, then the sire and dam.  IF 
the lamb or sire or dam's coefficient of inbreeding is greater than 10% 
perhaps even approaching 15%, the culprit is probably inbreeding (it brings 
out the best and the wurst).

If the coefficient for the lamb or its parents is not greater than, say, 5%, 
see if you can find siblings with complementary (not to be confused with 
complimentary) distorted color ratios.  Very often the amount of white and 
black is reversed between sets of lambs...one twin might be 90% black, the 
other 10% black...opposite looking "twins".  Since these are registered there 
should be a clue in the closet unless only the one complimentary "twin" (not 
the wurst) was registered.  

Just recently I had an opportunity to see a 95% white lamb with 95 % parents 
and each of the three had coefficients between 10 and 16%.  The inbreeding 
"fixed" the extreme white piebald recessive.  The question long term is how 
to breed out of the extreme white piebald.  One way, if you are confident of 
the genotype of the current lamb's sire and dam, is to breed each to a dark 
piebald.  The expected result for the first generation is 50-50 and each of 
them could produce an extreme white or dark piebald.    

The various s (piebald) alleles are heterozygous and are very complex.  You 
can selectively breed toward white or black but through the various breeding 
generatons the breeder will see a lot of variation.  Remeber it is the 
piebald s that makes the dominant black (Ed) have spots.  Culling extremely 
(white or black) marked single offspring takes the apparent culprit out of 
the gene pool but the parents are the carriers.  The worst scenario is 
culling an extremely marked twin and placing the normal colored into 
production...it probably carries the problem forward with a 50-50 chance of 
expression in the next generation.

(2) Hard questions next.  Lamb, dam or sire highly inbred? Yes, switch dam 
and sire.  Get out of the inbreeding loop.  Not inbred?  Send it in anyway as 
a record of the parents progeny not for purposes of registration for breeding 
purposes.  Can you repeat the breeding...time issue?  The record of 
subsequent progeny may help verify the genotype of the sire and dam.    The 
registration of the dam and sire is an accomplished fact. Virtually no 
registry for any breed (or species?) has a mechanism to "unregister" stock 
save the Cotswold(?).

Now, with the white lamb (which does not meet the Breed Std.) the breeder has 
to make a judgement as to how to proceed.  If not inbred, why is the white 
thus expressed?  Switch ram and ewe to a different ewe and ram.  If at some 
point the extreme white piebald reappears, you should have the suspect 
carrier.  The suspect carrier should be dropped from breeding ...and any 
relatives producing extreme white.  Can you borrow a ram or another ewe and 
experiment?  

(3) The first question on "purity" or "cross bred", when looking at 
registered animals with known pedigrees, is generally the last test question. 
 When buying livestock of any breed, you have to trust the ethics of the 
seller (1) see the whole flock (2) sire and dam (3) brothers and sisters and 
(4) the family tree.  If "impure" or "crossbred" it will show up or there 
will be "unknowns" in the pedigree.  







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