Fallow Linkage Trick by John Mulley, December 2021

When considering the genetics of fallows, there is a fallow linkage trick that has been established for helping identify birds that are split for this gene. The Fallow budgerigar mutation is one of many mutations altering budgerigar colour. At least three kinds of Fallow, the German, the English, and the Scottish, all named after their country of origin, have been identified – in Australia, we have the German Fallow as prevalent. Adult birds may be recognised by inspecting their eyes despite apparent similarities. All have red eyes, however the German Fallow’s iris ring is white, where the English Fallow’s eye is full red with a scarcely noticeable iris, and the Scottish Fallow’s iris is pink.

German and English Fallows are quite similar in most regards, as both resemble Cinnamons, but vary in that their body colour is considerably more muted, resulting in a very lovely mustard-yellow breast that fades to green on the rump (blue in the blue series).  Adult German Fallows have a rich ruby-red eye, similar to an Ino’s but a shade deeper, with the typical white iris ring. This is the most glaring difference between them and Cinnamons. The English Fallow has vivid red eyes without a white ring, which is a lovely and desirable trait. At hatching, young English Fallows have red eyes, similar to Inos, whilst young German Fallows have plum-colored eyes, similar to Cinnamon chicks.

Fallow is a recessive variety and tight linkage to the gene that mutated to Grey can be exploited to determine which of the second-generation chicks in Option 2 are splits. The best of these could be useful because they too will contain 50% of the outcross genetic content. They may have desirable features to offer our Fallow line or to other breeders interested in Fallows.

Techniques for Improving Fallows

There are several techniques breeders can use to improve a recessive variety, which applies to not just Fallows. Option 1 for upgrading Type in recessive varieties is to outcross to quality Normals to produce split recessives.  These split recessives receive 50% of their genetic content from the outcross. Mating these splits back to the visual recessive variety produces visual recessives in half the offspring. However, these chicks contain on average only 25% of the genetic content from the original outcross. Improvement using this mechanism is slow.

The second option for upgrading recessive varieties is to create splits from outcrossing, as above, and then mate split to split. Only 25% of the chicks will be visual recessives, so one has to work twice as hard to breed the same number of any given recessive variety as Option 1. The reward is that the recessives from Option 2 incorporate 50% of the genetic content from the outcross rather than only the 25% achieved by Option 1.  The remainder of these second-generation chicks will contain 50% of the genetic content from the outcross and two thirds of them will be splits for the recessive gene, but which ones? That can only be determined by test mating. Herein lies a short cut technique, specific only to the German Fallow variety (which is the Fallow found here in Australia).

The “Fallow technique” uses the Grey mutation in either Green Series or Blue Series to select which offspring of Split Fallow X Split Fallow matings are unmistakably Split Fallows. The referred-to Grey mutation is the prevalent dominant Australian Grey mutation.

The Fallow technique can be determined using one of two “tricks”.

Fallow Linkage Trick 1

Fallow Linkage Trick

Step 1: Cross Fallow Greens or Fallow Blues with Single Factor Grey Greens or Single Factor Greys. (Known to be Single Factor Grey because one of their parents were either Green or Blue, or otherwise by virtue of having previously bred non-Grey Greens or non-Grey Blues). Offspring will all be Split Fallow with an expectation that half will visually carry the Grey mutation, generally referred to in lay terms as the Grey Factor, and the other half will not carry the Grey mutation. At least two such crosses are required so that one has birds for Step 2 that are not too closely related.

 

 

Fallow Linkage Trick

 

 

Step 2: From the chicks from Step 1 cross Split Fallow carrying Grey to Split Fallow without Grey, but not brother and sister. The expectation is that 25% of the chicks will be Green or Blue Fallows with 50% of their genetic background derived from an outcross. All non-Fallow non-Grey chicks will with certainty be Split Fallow, with 50% of their genetic background derived from an outcross. Non-Fallow chicks with Grey content are discarded.

 

 

Fallow Linkage Trick 2

Fallow LinkageStep 1: Cross Fallow Greens or Fallow Blues with Double Factor Grey Greens or Double Factor Greys. (Known to be Double Factor Grey because their previous matings never produced Greens or Blues without Grey, that is, not Grey Green or Grey). Offspring will all be Split Fallow, and all will visually carry the Grey mutation.

Step 2: From the chicks from Step 1, all of which are Split Fallow carrying Grey, cross to another outcross that is Green or Blue and not Grey Green of Grey. None of the Grey factor chicks will be Split Fallow but all the non-Grey Factor chicks (Greens and Blues) will be Split Fallow. They will carry a double injection of outcross genetic content, taking that content up to 75%.

Step 3: These 75%’ers can be mated directly to Fallows or if conscientious to Split Fallows with Grey Factor from Step 1 with an outcome as described for Step 2 of Trick 1.

The above is an expanded version of the basic procedure specific to Green Series that I saw some years ago published in the Australian BRASEA Bulletin that appeared without specifying an author. The above version is generic covering both the Green Series and the Blue Series in either Normal or Opaline and with or without Dark Factor or Violet. That is all you need to know for implementation, but if you are curious as to how it works then read on.

I have not seen any formal validation for either Trick 1 or Trick 2 as outlined above so I have provided an interpretation in the Appendix. If anyone knows of a similar or simpler explanation published elsewhere or knows of any reports of German Fallow Greys or German Fallow Grey Greens please let me know.

 

Linkage

Where does linkage come into it with Fallows? Mendel’s second law of inheritance, independent assortment, states that alleles at two genes determining a pair of traits (in our case the Grey mutation at one gene locus and the Fallow mutation at another gene locus), are sorted independently from each other during the formation of sperm and eggs. Stated simply, alternative traits determined by different genes get an equal chance to occur together. But anyone in Australia who has attempted to produce Grey Green or Grey Fallows starting from Green or Blue Fallows knows that this is not always how this Mendelian law works, because you cannot breed Grey Green or Grey Fallows.

The most plausible explanation is that the gene mutated for Grey and the gene mutated for German Fallow are located extremely close together on the same pair of chromosomes. Under that circumstance alternative alleles at each gene are inherited together far more often than by chance. They are said to be linked, in genetic terminology, due to their physical proximity on the same chromosome. There are at least 26 pairs of chromosomes in budgerigars (they are hard to count due to many micro-chromosomes in birds) so genes for most monogenic traits determining budgerigar varieties are not linked on the same pair of chromosomes.

Further Notes on Linkage

Assuming that the German Fallow mutation and the Grey mutation are indeed tightly linked on the same pair of homologous chromosomes then the German Fallow mutation at least in the Australian version is not on the same homologue of the chromosome pair as the Grey mutation. An improbable genetic crossover would be required to place the Fallow and Grey mutations onto the same homologue of the chromosome pair that carries them. Genetic crossover is improbable because the gene when mutated that expresses Grey and the gene when mutated that expresses German Fallow are located extremely close to each other.

According to the literature, the English and Scottish Fallows do occur in Grey Green and Grey forms. This is consistent with the fact that they and the German Fallow mutation involve three separate genes. The English and Scottish Fallows differ from the German Fallow in eye colour and presence and colour of the iris ring. When these three types of Fallow are inter-crossed the result is Normal non-Fallow chicks, proving that the three types of Fallow are caused by mutations at three different genes, probably on different chromosomes. The genes for English and Scottish Fallow are not tightly linked to the gene which when mutated gives Grey because these forms of the Fallow are reported in Grey Green and Grey.

John Mulley, specialist Crested Budgerigar Breeder
John Mulley