Solid black (chicken plumage)

Castilian Black hen, a typical solid black breed.
Black chick exhibiting attributes associated with extended black E allele: Black down with grayish white in the ventral surface and black pigment extended to beak, legs and toes.

Solid black plumage color refers to a plumage pattern in chickens (Gallus gallus domesticus) characterized by a uniform, black color across all feathers. There are chicken breeds where the typical plumage color is black, such as Australorp, Sumatra, White-Faced Black Spanish, Jersey Giant and others. And there are many other breeds having different color varieties, which also have an extended black variety, such as Leghorn, Minorca, Wyandotte, Orpington, Langshan and others.[1]

Color is an important feature of most living organisms. In the wild, color has great significance affecting the survival and reproductive success of the species. The environmental constraints which lead to the specific colors of birds and animals are very strong and individuals of novel colors tend not to survive. Under domestication, mankind has transformed all the species involved which have thus been freed from environmental pressures to a large extent. Early color variants were mostly selected for utility reasons or religious practices. In more recent centuries color varieties have been created purely for ornament and pleasure, fashion playing a surprisingly large part in their development. A bewildering array of colors and patterns can now be found in the domestic fowl.[2]

The occurrence of solid or nearly solid colored black plumage is widespread among avian species. Such phenotypes result mostly from single mutations associated with an increase of eumelanin deposition.[3] In the case of the domestic fowl, two genetically different black plumage phenotypes have been described.

Description

Chick color

Chicks of black plumage varieties are also black, with some black in beaks, legs and dorsal side of the toes, but with a varying degree of white or grayish white in the ventral surface and the tip of the wings.[1] To the naked eye, the length of the down in black chicks is also shorter than that of any other color variety.[1][4] Juvenile plumage frequently show one or more white feathers.

Adult plumage color

Australorp adult male showing its typical solid black plumage associated with extended black E allele.

Entire surface is pure black due to the presence of eumelanin pigmentation in all parts of the feathers with considerable extension of black pigment to the shanks and beaks. The head, hackle, back, saddle, sickles and wing bows of the may have a beetle-green to purple sheen that may be particularly rich in male birds but still very evident in females. The green and purple sheens are a structural coloration, not pigment. The feathers of chickens and nearly all birds which appear to have green feathers do not have any green pigment. Green pigment has only been found in turacos (Cuculiformes, Musophagidae), small African birds. Structural coloration is produced by the constructive interference of light reflecting from different layers of the structures in feathers.

History

Most chicken plumage color genetic factors were manipulated during domestication by selection and crossings which led to the modern chicken breeds, but there are no historical records of when or were the first solid black chickens arose. In the creation of new black breeds, black color have been sometimes introduced from breeds of solid black.

Black Cochin or Cochin China breed was originally bred in China and later exported to Britain and America in the mid 19th century. First specimens came from Shanghai to Europe as a present given to the Queen of England in 1843, and twenty years later they were known in all Europe.[5]

The Langshan breed, a breed of solid black plumage, was also originally bred in China and was first imported to Europe by the Major Croad, of the English Army in 1872.[5] The original Black Orpington was bred by William Cook in 1886 by crossing Minorcas, Langshans and Plymouth Rock to create a new hybrid bird. Cook selected a black bird that would exhibit well by hiding the dirt and soot of London.[6] Australorps were developed in Australia mainly from Black Orpingtons .

Castilian Black, a typical black chicken breed was originally bred in Spain. Plumage is completely black with green sheen in the wing bows. Minorca was later developed in England from imported Castilian fowls of Spain.[5]

Andalusian Blue was very well known and appreciated in Spain at the second half of the 19th century, being present in the Real Botanical Garden of Madrid in 1864.[7] Although not regarded as a solid black plumage breed, but registered by the American Poultry Association as a "blue" breed, it is really a black plumage breed segregating for locus Bl,[8] a mutation that dilutes black to a bluish gray. Only heterozygotes are "blue", so it is impossible to fix the "blue" color plumage. Heterozygotes Bl/bl+ individuals have the entire surface of a uniform shade of plain slaty blue, clearly and sharply laced with bluish black. Homozygotes Bl/Bl are white with a faint bluish gray tinge, and blue in feathers with the form of large irregular shaped blobs. And homozygotes bl+/bl+ are solid black. The mating of "blue" cocks and hens" give an offspring of black, "blue" and whittish gray tinged fowls in the mendelian proportion 1:2:1 respectively.

Genetics of solid black plumage

Inheritance of chicken plumage color is complex. It depends on several genetic factors which interact epistatically. Solid black plumage is the result of a combination of genes which interact to give the final result. In plumage, the expression of any color, except white, requires the presence of the allele C (color), an autosomic dominant allele that allows the synthesis of pigment in the feathers.[1]

In the domestic fowl, two black plumage phenotypes have been described. The best known of these is due to the extended black mutation E,[9][10] which is the most dominant of the multiple alleles at the E locus and is primarily responsible for the completely black plumage of most breeds of fowl.[11]

Extended black E mutation

E (extended black) is the most dominant allele of an autosomic locus which controls the extension of black to different parts of the plumage. These allele allows the extension of black pigment to the feathers of the whole plumage, producing solid black plumage. It is present not only in most solid black plumage breeds, but also in black barred breeds, such as Barred Rocks, in mottled breeds such as Ancona and some white breeds such as White Leghorns.[8] This mutation is epistatic to many other color patterns based on the recessive alleles of the locus E: Most crossings between solid black plumage fowls and fowls exhibiting other plumage patterns, give a solid black plumage offspring.[1] But E is also hypostatic to a type of white: Crossings between Black Australorps and White Leghorns, which are so popular in many countries to produce egg layers, give an offspring of nearly white plumage.

Sex link black hen obtained from the mating of Rhode Island Red males with Barred Rock females

Otherwise, non-black fowls may have black offspring too: The popular cross between Rhode Island Red males and Barred Rock females, commonly employed to obtain hybrid brown egg layers, such as ISA Brown, gives solid black females with a few brushstrokes of red in the chest.


A few other color genes affect the expression of the extended black E mutation reducing the amount of black in all, or some parts of the feathers:[8]

Melanotic Ml mutation

Barnevelder cock exhibiting a nearly black plumage associated with melanotic Ml mutation in homozygosity.

A second black or nearly all black adult phenotype but with little eumelanin in the shanks and beak, has been described. This mutation, unlike E has no influence on down coloration. But is responsible for the extension of black pigment into the normally red areas of red-zone fowl interacting with the other alleles at the E locus. This autosomic mutation is Ml (melanotic) and its expression varies however with the E allele present.[11]

In other words, Ml interacts with the recessive alleles of the E allelic series which normally produce non-solid black plumage, "extending" black to zones which otherwise would be of some other color. This gene has little or none effect on the chick down color nor extends black to the shanks.

Ml was incorporated by selection during the fixation of the black color of some breeds to reinforce the processes leading to completely black plumage. Its presence has been confirmed in Black Minorca, Laced Cochin, Laced Wyandotte and in White Crested Black Polish (chicken),[8] although the latter has not a solid black black plumage, but a white crest instead. Presence of Ml was also confirmed in Castilian Black[12] and in Double-Laced Barnevelder where only the females show double-laced pattern whereas males are melanized black-breasted reds.[13]

Homozygotes Ml/Ml

Homozygotes Ml/Ml are nearly all black especially in combination with some recessive alleles of the E allelic series such as eb (brown) and e+ (wild type), except that females with e+ are black with salmon breasts, while females with eWh are wheaten with dark brown back and hackle. Males are nearly all black.

Heterozygotes Ml/ml+

Melanotic Ml in single dose has little or no effect on plumage color in combination with eWh in females. Heterozygotes Ml/ml+ have black head and hackle in combination with eb and e+ but little effect on eWh females. It is difficult to distinguish the heterozygous males from the wild type but the black head and hackle of the heterozygous females is quite obvious. Melanotic is considered incompletely dominant because heterozygotes are unlike either homozygote.[11][12]

Breeds better known by their black variety

Black Orpington rooster
Black Orpington hen
Black Minorca rooster
Black Shumen rooster
Transsylvanian Naked-neck rooster


Breeds having varieties of black plumage


Other species

Turkeys

Solid black plumage is controlled by B (black), an autosomal dominant allele in the triple allelic b'+ series. It produces an entire plumage black with a bright metallic sheen.[15]

Japanese quail

Solid black plumage is controlled by E (extended black), an autosomal incomplete dominant allele in its allelic series. It extends black and dark brown pigment throughout the plumage.[16]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Hutt, F.B. Genética Avícola. Salvat Editores,S.A. 1ra.ed. España, 1958.
  2. Sheppy, A. 2011 The colour of domestication and the designer chicken. Optics & Laser Technology Volume 43, Issue 2, pp. 295–301.
  3. Searle, A.G. Comparative Genetics of Coat Colour in Mammals. Logos/Academic London/New York, 1968.
  4. Kabystina, P. A. and Petrov, S. G. 1935 The genetics of down length in chicks (trans. title) Genetika Selekcija seljsk.-hoz Zivotn 1:321-336.
  5. 1 2 3 Castelló Carreras, S. Avicultura. Curso completo de gallinocultura e industrias anexas. 3ra.ed. Zootecnia Especial de las Aves Domésticas. Granja Paraíso de Arenys de Mar (Barcelona) 1916
  6. Verhoff, Esther (2003). The Complete Encyclopedia of Chickens. Lisse, Netherlands: Rebo International. p.158. (ISBN 978-90-366-1592-1)
  7. GRAELLS, Mariano de la Paz (1864). Fuentenebro, Madrid. ed. El Jardín Botánico y Zoológico de Madrid. Paseo instructivo y recreativo para todos.
  8. 1 2 3 4 5 Somes, R. G. International Registry of Poultry Genetic Stocks. A Directory of Specialized Lines and Strains, Mutations, Breeds and Varieties of Chickens, Japanese Quail and Turkeys. Storrs Agricultural Experiment Station, The University of Connecticut, Storrs, Bulletin #460, (1981).
  9. Brumbaugh, J.A. and Hollander, W.F. 1965 A further study of the E pattern locus in the fowl. Iowa State J. Sci. 40:51-64.
  10. Smyth, J.R. Jr. 1965 Allelic relationship of genes determining extended black, wild type and brown plumage patterns in the fowl. Poultry Science 44:89-98.
  11. 1 2 3 Moore, J.W. and Smyth, J.R. Jr. 1971 Melanotic: Key to a Phenotypic Enigma in the Fowl. Journal of Heredity 62:215-219.
  12. 1 2 Campo, J. L. and Orozco, F. 1986 Genetic basis of the melanotic Prat phenotype. British Poultry Science. 27:361-367.
  13. W. C. Carefoot, 1987. Vol. 28, Issue 1, pages 173-175. Inheritance of the plumage pattern of the double‐laced Barnevelder bantam. British Poultry Science. http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/00071668708416949?journalCode=cbps20 Retrieved 2015-01-08.
  14. Twisselmann, C. W. 2001 The Black Cubalaya. SPPA Bulletin, 2001, 6(1):5
  15. Genetics. 30:305-322 (1945).
  16. Journal of Heredity 70:205-210 (1979).
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