Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q3491937> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 39 of
39
with 100 triples per page.
- Q3491937 subject Q8522465.
- Q3491937 abstract "Grullo or grulla is a color of horses in the dun family, characterized by tan-gray or mouse-colored hairs on the body, often with shoulder and dorsal stripes and black barring on the lower legs. In this coloration, each individual hair is mouse-colored, unlike a roan, which is composed of a mixture of dark and light hairs. The several shades of grullo are informally referred to with a variety of terms, including black dun, blue dun, slate grullo, silver grullo, silver dun, or lobo dun. In the Icelandic horse, the grullo color is called gray dun, in the Highland pony it is called mouse dun, and in the Norwegian Fjord horse, grå or gråblakk (literally, "gray dun").The word "grullo" originates from the Spanish word grulla, which refers to a slate-gray crane. Because of the origin of the name, some people will refer to a mare as a grulla and a stallion or gelding as a grullo, pronounced /ˈɡrjuːjə/ GREW-yə and /ˈɡrjuːjoʊ/ GREW-yoh, respectively. (The original Spanish noun is pronounced [ˈɡɾuʝa] in American Spanish and [ˈɡɾuʎa] in Peninsular Spanish.)In terms of equine coat color genetics, all of these shades are based on the dun gene acting as a dilution gene over the black gene. Because the grullo color is not due to the gray gene, a grullo horse remains the same basic color from birth, though some minor shade variation may occur from summer to winter coats. If a grullo also carries the gray gene, it will be born a mouse tan-gray shade, but then lighten and eventually develop a white hair coat with age. Because black is less common in general than bay or chestnut, grullo is likewise less common than red duns or bay (classic or zebra) duns. For example, only 0.7% of quarter horses registered each year with the AQHA are grullo. The most obvious ways to tell a grullo are not only the existence of gray or tan-gray body color, but also its primitive markings, which include some or all of the following: dark face, cobwebbing around the eyes and forehead, dark mottling on the body, leg barring (sometimes called tiger striping), dark ear tips and edging, dark ear barring, dark shadowing of the neck, dark dorsal and transverse striping, and dark mane and tail guard hairs.".
- Q3491937 thumbnail PoneyDun.jpg?width=300.
- Q3491937 wikiPageExternalLink coatcolor.php.
- Q3491937 wikiPageExternalLink dunhorse.php.
- Q3491937 wikiPageExternalLink dun.html.
- Q3491937 wikiPageExternalLink inform1.php.
- Q3491937 wikiPageExternalLink colorsGrullo.shtml.
- Q3491937 wikiPageExternalLink Colors.html.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1145422.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1225660.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q123509.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1321.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1344193.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1502114.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1520693.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1593072.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q1617933.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q197204.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q206557.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q233608.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q25365.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q262924.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q2750918.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q27742.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q3058369.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q3160994.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q326262.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q3294752.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q394327.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q466561.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q7162990.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q726.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q8522465.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q857040.
- Q3491937 wikiPageWikiLink Q876459.
- Q3491937 comment "Grullo or grulla is a color of horses in the dun family, characterized by tan-gray or mouse-colored hairs on the body, often with shoulder and dorsal stripes and black barring on the lower legs. In this coloration, each individual hair is mouse-colored, unlike a roan, which is composed of a mixture of dark and light hairs. The several shades of grullo are informally referred to with a variety of terms, including black dun, blue dun, slate grullo, silver grullo, silver dun, or lobo dun.".
- Q3491937 label "Grullo".
- Q3491937 depiction PoneyDun.jpg.