Homozygous Banded is called "Charlie" and can express as a very wide band or can even cover the whole body. In this case, it is the latter, and the mouse is a "Black-Eyed White." These are very prone to becoming overweight.
3 Hairless genes all in one photo! Dominant Hairless, Recessive Hairless, and Recessive Fuzzy.
Recessive Hairless.
This is a truly hairless gene, and the mice are absolutely nude! They are born with a normal coat, but at the hopper stage will start to go bald from head to tail. It is recessive. Female R.Hairless should not be bred though, as unlike the other Hairless strains, they can have issues lactating. Breeding is best done with a RHL male and a RHL-carrier female.
Dominant Hairless.
As indicative of its name, this gene is dominant. A DHL (for short) can have anywhere from 0 hair to a thin coat of peachfuzz. I am able to identify these as early as pinkies, because their whiskers are either bent out of shape or non-existent.
Fuzzy aka Recessive Fuzzy.
It is exactly what it sounds like - it is a thin coat of curly fuzz!! Fuzzy is a recessive gene in Mice.
Fawn, the combo of Red-Eyed + Recessive Yellow. Picture is BBM's Fawntasy
Black Self. BBM's Haunter
Black Self. BBM's Haunter
Black Self. BBM's Haunter
A gorgeous example of Rumpwhite, on this Fawn Rumpwhite Manx. BBM's Creamsicle
A triple-litter of Fuzzy!!
An absolutely stunning Black Fuzzy.
A double-litter of ExtremeBlack pups. It can be hard to tell XBlack from regular Black - but XBlack will turn the usual Tan fault hairs clear, making the mouse appear a cleaner black color overall.
Extremeblack Burmese Fuzzy
Underside coloration of a Black Tan buck.
Extremeblack buck, BBM Cheddar Bay Biscuits.
Black Banded Dominant Hairless.
BBM's Snakpak
Agouti Rumpwhite (high-expression)
Black Rumpwhite Dominant Hairless (high-expression Rumpwhite)
Black Merle. The Merle gene can only occur on Roan.
Black Merle.
Silver is a combination of the Red Eye gene + Blue.
Recessive Yellow. I love this color!
Dove Tan Satin.
Chinchilla. I get a lot of comments at expos asking "is that really a baby Chinchilla??"
No, this is a color of mouse. Chinchilla takes away or "dilutes" the reddish brown color of a mouse and leaves you with mostly gray, and a white belly.
A nearly perfect Rumpwhite.
BBM's Burger King
Blue Rumpwhite (high-expression RW). BBM's Olive Garden
One of my AMAZING Black Selfs. BBM's Gengar
Tricolor Texel - I no longer work with Tricolor.
Black Self. BBM's Banette
Blue-Agouti Rumpwhite - and he's a looker! BBM's Buffalo.
A nursing mother Black Tan Satin. Tan only covers a mouse's underside, and Satin is best observed this way as well. Even a Black Satin will be obvious if you check the belly.
Probably the best Angora I ever produced. Umbrous Agouti Satin Angora buck.
3 Dominant Hairless Rumpwhite pups.
You can tell they are DHL rather than coated, because they don't have any whiskers.
Black Tan
Cream Abysinnian buck
Silver Satin
Blue-Agouti Fox Satin Abysinnian
Roan
Pink-Eyed White (PEW) Satin Texel.
Texel is a combination of the genes Angora + Rex.
I no longer have a group of these going, but I do breed Texels and PEW seperately.
A look at one of my old Recessive Hairless groups.
A very pregnant Cinnamon.
Blue Dominant Hairless
Black-Eyed White Dominant Hairless!! BBM's Snowman
Silver-Agouti Rumpwhite
Blue-Point Siamese.
Burmese is the combination of heterozygous Himilayan and heterozygous Chinchilla. These are allelic on the c-locus.
Black Self. BBM's Gengar
A gorgeous young example of the Abyssinian coat type.
Tiny little Black Self baby! The black ears, feet, and tail, are a must with this type.