Black horse
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
A black horse has a coat that is completely black, with no reddish or brownish areas. This deep black color is different from dark chestnuts or bays.
Black horses usually have dark brown eyes and black skin. Even though their coats look black all over, some may have areas of white hair, called white markings. Under these white areas, the skin might be pink.
When black horses are in the sunlight and sweat, their coats can look lighter. But you can still tell they are black by looking closely at the hair around the eyes, muzzle, and genitals. Certain breeds, like the Friesian horse, Murgese, and Ariegeois, are almost always black. The color is also common in other breeds such as the Fell pony and Dales pony.
Visual identification
When you want to know a horse's color, ignore any white markings. These white spots or patterns, like pinto or leopard, don’t change the horse’s true color.
Baby black horses, called foals, are often born looking gray but can be darker. Sometimes they look like grullo or bay dun because of markings that fade as they grow. Black baby horses have dark skin and eyes. If a baby horse looks almost fully black, it might turn gray later, especially if one of its parents is a gray horse. Fully grown black horses have coats that are completely black, even if the sun has lightened some parts.
Black mimics
- Dark bay or seal brown: Some dark bay horses look almost black but still have a little red in their coat. Horses that look black but have tan or reddish hair near their eyes, nose, armpits, or legs are called "seal brown," "mahogany bay," or "black bay." These colors are different from true black and can be checked with a DNA test.
- Liver chestnut: Some chestnut horses are very dark and look almost black. These are called "black chestnuts." But even the darkest liver chestnuts have some red in their coat, usually near the lower legs, mane, or tail. They don’t have true black pigment. This can be confirmed with DNA testing. Liver chestnut is common in the Morgan horse.
- Smoky black: When the cream gene mixes with a black coat, it makes little change, so smoky blacks look very similar to true blacks. A smoky black usually has at least one cream parent and may be born a light gray color with blue eyes.
Genetic identification
Main article: Equine coat color genetics
When we talk about horse coat colors, black is a basic color, like red. This helps us learn how other colors work. Colors that start with black include grullo (also called blue dun), smoky black, smoky cream, silver black, classic champagne, and blue roan. Sometimes, colors like bay, seal brown, buckskin, and bay dun are also included.
The genetics of a black horse are simple. Two main genes control the black color: Extension and Agouti. If a horse has the right version of the Extension gene, it can make black pigment in its hair. Without this gene, the horse will have a red coat. The Agouti gene decides where the black pigment appears. If this gene is not active, the horse will have a completely black coat.
A true black horse has the right version of the Extension gene and a certain version of the Agouti gene. Scientists can use a DNA test on a hair with its root to check these genes. This helps confirm if a horse that looks black is truly black and not just a dark bay or chestnut.
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