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Purebred Icelandic sheep in Virginia’s heartland |







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Pattern 2: Gray
This pattern allows the sheep’s basic color to show through in her outer wool (tog), while the inner wool (thel) grows in white. Depending on what her base color is, the sheep will be either black gray or moorit gray. When sheared, a gray sheep has a light-colored body with dark head and legs. |
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A black gray ewe and her fleece |
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A moorit gray ewe and her fleece. |

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The Six Patterns
There are six possible patterns that determine how the two basic colors express themselves on the sheep. These patterns are: white, gray, badgerface, mouflon, solid, and gray-mouflon.
Pattern 1: White
Genetically, white is not a “color” in Icelandic sheep. It’s a pattern that is overlaid on top of the sheep’s base color.
Interestingly, sometimes the white pattern can have a “hole” in it that allows the sheep’s underlying color to show through. This is useful for helping you figure out what color she carries under the white pattern.
Our white ewe Poppy, for instance, has a brown ear, which tells us that underneath her white pattern, her base color is moorit.
This is different from the gene that causes spotting. |
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Pattern 3: Badgerface This pattern lightens the base color on the sheep’s body and causes a distinctive “badger-like” pattern on the face. The chin, throat patch, inner ears, belly, legs, and under the tail remain dark. Depending on what her base color is, the sheep will be either black badgerface or moorit badgerface.
The fleece of a badgerface sheep is an interesting mix of colors. The outer wool (tog) is a pale, creamy off-white, but the inner wool (thel) is slightly darker, like a smoky, pale version of the base color. |
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A black badgerface ewe and her fleece. |


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Although the white spots on this spotted moorit badgerface ewe have almost entirely covered up her color and pattern, you can still tell she is a moorit badgerface because of the two-tone brown markings on her face. |
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Pattern 4: Mouflon Mouflon is the opposite of badgerface. The sheep’s body remains dark, while the chin, throat patch, inner ears, belly, legs and under the tail are lightened. Depending on what her base color is, the sheep will be either black mouflon or moorit mouflon. |

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A moorit mouflon ram and his fleece. |
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A black mouflon ewe and her fleece. |
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Pattern 5: Solid Solid essentially means “no pattern.” The sheep displays is base color with no patterns to alter it. The two sheep pictured under the heading “The Two Basic Colors: Black and Moorit,” on the previous page, demonstrate the solid pattern.
Pattern 6: Gray Mouflon (single gene) Because the Gray and Mouflon patterns are equally dominant (more about this below), a sheep may show both of them at the same time (2 separate pattern genes). However, there is another pattern that expresses Gray Mouflon as a single gene. Currently, this gene is very rare and found only in Iceland.
Pattern Dominance
White: The pattern that produces white sheep is dominant over all other patterns. If the sheep carries even one gene for white, the sheep will be white, no matter what other pattern she carries. She can still pass that other pattern on to her lambs, though. If the sheep is homozygous for white (carries two copies of the white pattern gene), all her lambs will be white, no matter who you breed her to.
Solid: Solid is recessive to all other patterns. If the sheep carries any other pattern, it will show up on top of the solid pattern. A sheep must have two copies of the solid gene to appear solid.
Gray, Badger, & Mouflon: These three patterns are co-dominant, meaning a sheep can express more than one of them at a time. There can be gray-badgers, gray-mouflons, and badger-mouflons, each expressing characteristics of both patterns. If you see a sheep that is expressing only ONE of these patterns, you automatically know the other pattern she carries is either a second copy of the first pattern (making her homozygous for that pattern) or else the recessive gene for the solid pattern. |




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A white lamb |
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A white lamb with heavy phaeomelanin |
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This ewe’s phaeomelanin has faded to its permanent adult shade. |
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A white ewe and her fleece |
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The Influence of Phaeomelanin
Most white lambs are born white and stay that color all their lives. But some carry a minor gene that produces extra phaeomelanin, a pigment that gives them a distinctive tan color. Phaeomelanin fades somewhat as the sheep grows up, leaving the fleece a beautiful “antique linen” shade.
Other color/patterns can have phaeomelanin too, but it usually isn’t quite as noticeable as it is on a white sheep. |
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Identifying Gray: The gray pattern is not obvious at birth. Newborn lambs that carry the gray gene usually look like whatever other pattern they carry (solid, mouflon, or badger).
Often, the only way you can tell a gray lamb at birth is to look for “sugar lips” (a faint sprinkling of white near the lamb’s mouth. Soon the white will begin show up around the eyes and in the under coat as well. |
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At first glance, this young lamb (left) looks solid moorit, but by the time she’s a week older (right), the white “sugar lips” are obvious even from a distance. By the time she’s grown up, she will probably look like her mother, the moorit gray ewe pictured above. |
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Because this lamb’s spotting pattern covered up the area where her “sugar lips” would have been, we didn't know for sure that she was gray until the sprinkling of white showed up around her eyes when she was a few weeks old. |




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“Frosted” Mouflon There is a minor variation of the mouflon pattern, usually called the “frosted” mouflon, characterized by parts of the dark body fleece being “frosted” with paler brown and tan coloring. This type of coloring is most frequently found in sheep descended from the AI ram Hnykill. |
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A plain black mouflon lamb (left) and his frosted black mouflon twin (right). |
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A plain moorit mouflon lamb (left) and his frosted moorit mouflon twin (right). |

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This gray-mouflon lamb displays both the pale undercoat of the gray pattern and the distinctive face markings of the mouflon pattern. |
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The double pattern on this badger-mouflon lamb has lightened both her upper and lower body, leaving her a beautiful, pale golden color all over. |
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A moorit badgerface ewe. |
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This gray-badger lamb looks very similar to a regular badgerface, but the presence of the gray pattern makes the undercoat of her fleece pale instead of smoky. |
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Nancy Chase, 781 Alcoma Rd., Buckingham, VA 23921 Email: InglesideSheep@aol.com |
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Icelandic Lamb Pattern Predictor This chart tells you what pattern your lamb will be, based on what patterns it inherits from its parents. Remember that every sheep carries two pattern genes, only one of which it will pass on to any given lamb. If the sheep is white, you may not even know what other pattern she carries until you see what patterns her lambs are! |
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Pattern Gene inherited from Parent A |
Pattern Gene inherited from Parent B |
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White |
Gray |
Badger |
Mouflon |
Solid |
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White |
White |
White |
White |
White |
White |
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Gray |
White |
Gray |
Gray-Badger |
Gray-Mouflon |
Gray |
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Badger |
White |
Gray-Badger |
Badger |
Badger-Mouflon |
Badger |
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Mouflon |
White |
Gray Mouflon |
Badger-Mouflon |
Mouflon |
Mouflon |
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Solid |
White |
Gray |
Badger |
Mouflon |
Solid |