Colorful Yorkieshire Terrier Club


Colorful Yorkshire Terrier Club


Colorful Yorkieshire Terrier Club


How Parti Yorkies Came to Be

by Sue White


Many skeptical Yorkie owners and breeders, absolutely refuse to believe that the Parti colored Yorkie is anything other than a recent "behind the kennel bred" mutt. They say: "There is NO white gene in our Purebred Yorkies" or "There is NO record of any Yorkie ever breeding to a white or parti colored dog" or "No show breeder who's been breeding and showing for 30 or 40 years, has ever produced a parti colored Yorkie."

Parti colored (and other off colors) have been showing up in our Yorkshire Terriers since the beginning of the breed. I'm going to try to educate people on color genetics, recessive genes and how the Parti gene remained hidden in the Yorkshire terrier breed for years.

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We know from our Yorkie history, that early records were not kept on the foundation breeding stock. I seriously doubt, that back in the days where spaying and neutering was not done, that the farmers and working class families didn't have the "occasional" unplanned pregnancy in their canines. If anything, it happened more then, than it does today. History also notes that the Maltese was bred to the Yorkshire terrier to enhance the texture and length of the Yorkshire terriers coat, since most of the early dogs thought to have started the breed, were broken haired dogs with shorter, coarser coats.

It's documented in some of the earliest records that the foundation stock of our breed, were cross-bred dogs and dogs with out pedigrees (who's heritage is unknown). Even if these dogs didn't look parti colored they could very well have harbored the recessive Parti gene in their DNA makeup. Whether their mother/father, grandmother/grandfather or great grandmother/great grandfather ... was parti colored, no one would really know, since record keeping at that time in history, was little to none.

It is documented, that in the early 1900's, there were some breeders who tried to promote the White Yorkshire Terrier as well as the silver yorkie who was born with absence of any tan. Ernest Hemingway's Grandfather owned a white Yorkie named Tassel in the early 1900's and there are published writings during that same time period, indicating white yorkshire terriers were being shown at various State agricultural shows.

Some of the most highly regarded breeders of this breed, have produced parti and other off colors in their own lines.  Early Kennel Club and American Kennel Club records, lists "dark tan," "black," and  "blue" as some of the colors seen and registered in the yorkshire terrier breed. 

Off colors have been seen since the beginning of the breed and the recessive genes continue to appear today.

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The Parti gene can only be expressed if a parti gene carrier is bred to another parti gene carrier. A carrier will look like a traditional colored Yorkie but it's born with maybe some white on it's chin, chest and/or feet. In this case where a parti carrier is bred to another parti carrier, 25% of the offspring will be traditional Yorkies (not carrying the gene), 50% will be traditional colored Yorkies who do carry the recessive parti gene and 25% of the offspring will be actual Parti colored dogs. AKC has allowed Parti colored Yorkies to be eligible for registration since the early 2000’s, prior to that time, parti colored offspring were normally kept quiet, given away without papers or destroyed. The most prolific known line of Parti Yorkies is the "California line." These dogs are all descendants of an AKC Champion named Nikko's Rolls Royce Ashley. Two dedicated breeders in California, fought to get this line of Parti colored Yorkies, registered by AKC. This line of Parti carriers and Parti colored Yorkies comes from a well known show breeder who's been breeding and showing for over 40 years. Forty-two litters from this line were DNA'd prior to AKC's approval of registration.

The Yorkshire Terriers breed standards have changed over the years. The "Standard" color is blue and tan, any other color is considered to be "Off Standard." Until the new color disqualification rule went into effect, off standard colored, black and tan and black and gold yorkies have entered the show ring and won their champion status and this off colored yorkie continues to be used in today’s breeding programs. Standards have changed and not only do we now have smaller sized dogs than in the late 1800's, but some of our "off standard," darker coated dogs have been allowed into the show ring. Hopefully these types of changes along with a better understanding of color genetics, will open the door for the continued, growing acceptance of the Parti colored Yorkie.

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Parti colored Yorkies are healthy animals and they are not a genetic freak of nature as some people suggest. In this day of scam artists and people looking to make a fast buck, my suggestion is to buy from reputable breeders who have their dogs DNA'd and/or their dogs are from known lines of Parti producing dogs. There are other Yorkie lines of parti carriers and producers but the California line is the best known.

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Piebald gene and Deafness

by Sue White  

At this time, there does not appear to be a problem with deafness in the parti yorkie but this is  something that breeders must be aware of when breeding dogs that display the parti (piebald) gene.  We have been breeding parti colored yorkies for over 10 years and at least 5 generations but I've heard of no instances of deafness in the parti colored yorkie.

 Congenital deafness has been reported in approximately 85 different dog breeds (including the traditional colored yorkshire terrier), it can show up in almost any breed but especially those who have white pigmentation.  There are two genes that are associated with deafness in dogs, one is the Merle gene (not seen in the yorkie) the other is the piebald gene which is the spotting gene that causes the coloring on the parti yorkies.

Dogs who have white heads tend to have greater chances of deafness (deafness in one ear or both), so it's thought that breeding dogs who have pigmented coloring on their heads, will lessen the chances of deafness.

If you suspect or are concerned that your traditional colored or parti colored yorkie may have a hearing problem, there is a special earing test called the brainstem auditory evoked response test, also known as the “BAER” test, which will determine if there is a problem.

For more detailed information on Deafness and the Piebald gene please see the following links:

http://www.lsu.edu/deafness/genetics.htm

http://www.lsu.edu/deafness/deaf.htm

So do your research, get references and have an open mind. This gene has been in some of our Yorkie bloodlines for years and years and years ... and if you think it's not possible, don't be surprised if one day, your own purebred Yorkie produces a pup of a different color!








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