Thanks John.
I had read somewhere (maybe the Coop?) that homozygous E typically displays the "clown face" effect. I hadn't realized it could be as small as a dot!
I'm guessing the lavenders will be even harder to distinguish. Has anyone noticed a connection between shank color on Lavs and e-locus? I'm wondering if E is more diluted by the lavender gene than ER and would produce lighter shanks? Just my own personal hypothesis of guessing that the dilution wouldn't affect the ER melanizers as much as the E, since lavender (by definition) is a dilution of black.
I've got another small hatch in lockdown, so I'll have a couple more examples in a day or two...
Keep in mind that other than color difference the phenotype of an E/E black chick and E/E lavender chick will be the same, so when you see a white/cream dot on either side of the foreface on the lavender chicks you can assume them to be homozygous/pure. That is the e-locus we want lavenders to be based on and knowing that should help you in your project.
By definition lavender dilutes black, but in reality it dilutes much more, like red feathers, dilutes shank color and eye color.
Since E based shanks should be darker than E
R and assuming lavender would dilute them equally, a lavender with based on E would have darker shanks than on based on E
R.