5. Extreme dilution, ce

The extreme dilution gene is lower on the dominance scale than cch within the c-series. It has an even stronger effect on the yellow pigment than the chinchilla gene. Furthermore, this gene is the first one in the series to have a strong effect on black pigment as well. ce dilutes brown pigment less than black, which makes for an interesting effect - see 5.1.4. ce mice tend to darken with age and often molt streaky.

5.1. Homozygous Forms

5.1.1. ce with Ay

This gene “wipes out” (dilutes) yellow pigmentcompletely. Therefore Ay/* -- ce/ce mice are black eyed whites, suffering from all the problems associated with the dominant yellow colours. Add the pink-eyed gene to the mix and you have a pink-eyed white mouse.

5.1.2. ce with A

Agouti and ce make for a dirty brownish colouring, which makes the mouse look streaky and a bit dirty. The usual agouti pattern of a single hair's pigmentation doesn't show very well, the base of the hair being lighter and the tip darker. The mouse is slightly lighter than its nonagouti black representative.

Vanilja

Black eyed white, Ay/* ce/ce
pic: Arttu Väisälä

Noddyn Kesäyön Huume

Beige, a/a ce/ce
pic: Arttu Väisälä

Arttu

Colorpoint beige, a/a ce/ch
pic: Arttu Väisälä

Rapunzel's Post-Modern Prometheus

Bone, a/a ce/c
pic: Arttu Väisälä

5.1.3. ce with at

The “tanned” extreme dilution homozygotes have a completely white belly because of the strong effect this gene has on the yellow pigment. Well, why should the breeders use the more difficult chinchilla gene when breeding Foxes, rather than this one? -you might ask. The simple answer is: You don’t have much of a choice with colours and wouldn’t definitely get Black Fox and such. While the belly is reduced to pure white, the top colour will also be diluted. This top colour varies a bit, the lightest being a greyish shade of light tan (this is called Beige in many standards) to the darkest, which is coffee-with-cream in colour (this is called Coffee in many standards). With blue dilution added you'll get Smoke Fox.

5.1.4. ce with a

As mentioned above, ce dilutes both black and brown, but brown less than black. Therefore a/a B/* ce/ce P/* and a/a b/b ce/ce P/* are both Beige, the latter with dark ruby eyes. a/a bc/* ce/ce P/* is coffee - that is, darker than extreme dilution on a self black background.

5.2. Homozygous Forms

5.2.1. ce with ch

This combination gives Colorpoint Beige - a black eyed variety. As the combinations of albino group genes usually give phenotypes somewhere in-between the heterozygotes, this mouse has body colouring like a Siamese and points & lack of shadings like a Himalayan. Blue dilution version of the same theme is Colorpoint Smoke.

5.2.2. ce with c

With Ay/* - ce/c mice are Black Eyed White, which tend to have typical Red ears and body type.

Most familiar example of a ce/c mouse is Bone. This variety is "phase three Cream", the Cream of present day British Fancy. Bone is inbetween ce/ce Beige and c/c albino in colour. The final shade depends on other genes and modifiers present and can vary from slightly off-white to almost beige. With p/p, the mouse can easily pass for an albino, especially in satin coat. ce/c p/p mice reveal their true genotype usually only after a breeder gets black eyed young from a supposedly c/c x c/c cross. A true Bone has black bakcground, A/* makes for a uneven colouring. Aw and at both give Bone Fox, the latter being proper. Bone Foxes tend to be darker than self Bones, due to at usually bringing in top colour darkening Umbrous determinants.