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Other Colors Determined by Silver

The Silver gene dilutes only areas of hair containing eumelanin, and so it has no effect on red hair. The term silver chestnut is occasionally used in English writings on the subject of horse color to describe horses with a chestnut base that are carriers of the Silver gene. Such horses have the potential of producing silver offspring.

If the Silver gene is present in a horse in combination with other dilution genes, the resulting colors can become difficult to identify when only observing the phenotype. This is especially difficult in the Rocky Mountain Horse, Mountain Pleasure Horse, and the Icelandic Horse breeds, in which many individuals have similar combinations of genes. For example, the mane and tail hair diluted by the Silver gene can be mixed up with frosting, a characteristic of dun colors (see ssss1). In combination with the dun or buckskin, the effect of the Silver gene shows very poorly. For example, a silver dun horse looks very similar to a bay dun but also has pale yellow or whitish guard hair; however, the legs are dark, sometimes with leg webbing. I was lucky enough to discover this color in Byelorussian Harness Horses. The silver buckskin also looks quite ambiguous. The color ranges from sandy to whitish, and the mane and tail are diluted brown or dirty yellow. This color is found in Icelandic Horses, where some time ago it was mistaken for the Champagne dilution (see ssss1). One more rare combination is silver grullo. This horse is externally very similar to grullo—the only difference is an almost-white mane and tail, and sometimes leg webbing.

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