Uhhh..rabbits, goats, horses, fish, wolves, birds, monkeys, dogs, cats, sheep..theres 1000s
The
domestic sheep is one member of the genus, and is thought to be descended from the wild
mouflon of
central and
southwest Asia..
Mouflon have red-brown, short-haired coats with dark back-stripes and light-colored saddle patches. The males are
horned; some females are horned, while others are
polled. The horns of mature rams are curved in almost one full revolution (up to 85 cm). Mouflon have shoulder heights of about 0.9 m and body weights of 50 kg (males) and 35 kg (females)
.
[4] All sheep are either genetically black or brown. Modifying genes can cause the wool to grey or become light brown with age. Black is dominant to brown. Black lambs display black wool, black hair on legs and face, black tongue and skin. Brown is recessive to black. Brown lambs display brown wool (light, medium, or dark hues), brown hair on legs and face, liver colored tongue and reddish skin.
Man did a lot of breeding to make sheep
White cats
White cat
True albinism (a mutation of the tyrosinase gene) is quite rare in cats. Much more common is the appearance of white coat color that is caused by a lack of
melanocytes in the skin. A
higher frequency of deafness in white cats is due to a reduction in the population and survival of melanoblast stem cells, which in addition to creating pigment-producing cells, develop into a variety of neurological cell types. White cats with one or two blue eyes have a particularly high likelihood of being deaf.
Cats with white or light color fur would appear pink. Dark color fur (like black, blue) would appear as dark color skin pigment..
man did a lot of breeding with cats also
dogs skin color It ranges in color from
pale pink to
brown or
black depending on the breed. Unless its albino
man did a lot of breeding with dogs also
monekys skin is black pink brown or gray except an albino monkey
No bird I ever seen was all white born with no trace of color. All natural born birds have some sort of melanin.
But anyways I asked the question wrong forgive me..Do any animals exist in the world that don't produce enough melanin to be protected against ultraviolet rays from the sun?
White animals are often found in nature and sometimes the cause is albinism. Melanin is the primary pigment that determines the color of a mammal`s skin, fur, and eyes. Albinism occurs in mammals (including humans), fish, birds, reptiles, and amphibians. It is a hereditary condition; the principal gene which results in albinism prevents the body from making the usual amounts of the pigment melanin. An animal inherits either a single trait or set of traits that interrupt melanin production.
Animals with albinism are typically white or very pale. However, not all animals with albinism are pure white; some traits that control melanin allow forms of the pigment to appear in the fur of the animal.