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Yes. :)
they would have t be very cloos tomate with a different type of horse
yes you could have 4 diffrent breeds within one horse
1320
In meiosis, a diploid horse cell would have 33 tetrads, as each tetrad consists of 4 chromatids. Since tetrads undergo independent assortment, there would be 2^33 = 8.5 billion possible chromosome combinations in a horse's eggs or sperm.
Yes, this is quite possible and not very rare actually.
Odin's horse Sleipnir is special in that it had eight legs.It is possible that "the horse with eight legs" is a kenning for a funeral bier being carried by four pallbearers.
The short answer is, this isn't possible as there aren't any white (albino) horses - they tend to die at birth or shortly thereafter due to associated severe genetic defects. However, you could breed a very light gray (almost white) horse to a red horse. The answer to your question at this point gets very sticky, because horse coat color is much more genetically complicated than the pea flowers Gregor Mendel studied. From what I recall from basic study into this, there are at least 14 different genes that interact to determine a horse's coat color - there are literally hundreds of different combinations that may result in a red horse and almost any coat color can fade into gray depending on the genes the horse inherited.
No.It is not possible
artificial insemination makes this possible
Different disciplines suggest different types, how much you need to control your horse, and how your horse will be used.
Horses come in many different breeds and a huge variety of colors and patterns. There are three or four different variations of chestnut, bay, grey, roan, palomino, ect. There are dun, grulla and buckskin. These are just a few of the many different colors that horses come in. The genetics to produce some of these coat colors is complicated even for experts. But it is always fun and fascinating to study horse colors.