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The diluting genes are all recessive. That means that both parents must carry it for their offspring to inherit a pair. Nobody knows how this pale cream with liver nose is created. If the liver gene was usual in Whippets my guess would be that the cream is a combination of all the dilute genes together. It may be that there is some other "super diluting" gene that causes this cream, some gene still to be discovered. There is also the possibility that this colouring is caused by some fault which results in loss of pigment. Does not matter what colour and marking genes this individual inherits, if the pigment is not there to be utilised, the animal will not display them. Naturally, when the cream is mated to something not having this particular gene (fault?) the markings and colours will be expressed. We would learn more if somebody would mate 2 of these creams. My guess is they would be all cream with liver noses.beaker said:i love this thread
My solid black lad Oto was mated to a solid cream bitch with liver nose/pigment
the cream bitch was from a blue to fawn mating (not sure if the fawn was fully pigmented or not) and Oto was from a blue to fully pigmented brindle parti,
the resulting pups were all blacks, blue's and irish marked black, a few of the blacks had a few fawn hairs here and there , (deffinately fawn not white), these pups all had the most gloriously black coats no hints of brown and had fully black noses/pigment,
so on the surface they appeared black but could they possibly have been genetically something else? maybe incredibly heavy sabled or verry densly striped black brindle?