Breeding a self group rabbit to a self group rabbit. These take into account only the dominant genes that a rabbit has, almost all rabbits will carry recessive genes, and therefore you will have more than 1 color in a litter. This is just what you will "most likely get." My last litter was a black silver marten X opal and I had 1 squirrel, 1 chestnut, and 1 blue silver marten.
BLACK BLUE CHOCLATE LILAC
BLACK BLACK BLACK BLACK BLACK
BLUE BLACK BLUE BLUE BLUE
CHOCLATE BLACK BLACK CHOCLATECHOCLATE
LILAC BLACK BLACK CHOCLATE LILAC

Breeding shaded variety to shaded variety
SABLEPOINTSIAMESABLESIASMOKEPL
SABLEPOINTSABLEPOINTSIAMESABLESIAMESABLE
SIAMESABLESIAMESABLESIAMESABLESIAMESABLE
SIASMOKEPLSIAMESABLESIAMESABLESIASMOKEPL

BREEDING AGOUTI TO AGOUTI
There isn't any restrictions--you can generally breed any agouti to any other agouti, without running into any problems colorwise.

CHESTNUT OPAL LYNX CHINCLLA SQUIRREL
CHESTNUTCHESTNUTCHESTNUTCHESTNUTCHESTNUTCHESTNUT
OPAL CHESTNUT OPAL OPAL CHESTNUT OPAL
LYNX CHESTNUT OPAL LYNX CHESTNUT LYNX
CHINCLLACHESTNUTCHESTNUTCHESTNUTCHINCLLACHINCLLA
SQUIRRELCHESTNUT OPAL SQUIRRELCHINCLLASQUIRREL

TAN TO TAN
You can breed black, blue, chocolate, and lilac silver martens and otters to any other silver marten or otter. You should only breed sable marten and smoke pearl martens to other sable martens or smoke pearl martens, to do otherwise you risk obtaining unfavorable colors of netherland dwarfs either with the first breeding or somewhere down the line. Also, you should never breed any of the black/tan blue/tan chocolate/tan or lilac/tan to anything other than another tan, due to the rufous modifying gene.

BKSMBLSMCHSMLISMSBLMSMPMBKTTBLTTCHTTLITT
BKSMBKSMBKSMBKSMBKSMBKSMBKSMBKTTBKTTBKTTBKTT
BLSMBKSMBLSMBKSMBLSMBKSMBLSMBKTTBKTTBLTTBLTT
CHSMBKSMBKSMCHSMCHSMBKSMBKSMBKTTCHTTBKTTCHTT
LISMBKSMBLSMCHSMLISMBKSMBLSMBKTTCHTTBLTTLITT
SBLMBKSMBKSMBKSMBKSMSBLMSBLMBKTTBKTTBKTTBKTT
SMPMBKSMBLSMBKSMBLSMSBLMSMPMBKTTBKTTBLTTBLTT

BLSM=black silver marten BLSM=blue silver marten CHSM=chocolate silver marten LISM=lilac silver marten SBLM=sable marten SMPM=smoke pearl marten BKTT=black otter BLTT=blue otter CHTT=chocolate otter LITT=lilac otter

AOV to AOV
AOV includes the himalayans, orange, fawn, tort and steel.
The Himalayan group should only be bred to another himalayan, although they can be useful in a shaded breeding program, by breeding a himalayan to a "too dark" shaded rabbit, it has the effect of lightening the saddle color and keeping the points dark. If you use himalayans in the shaded program, you should not keep any himalayan offspring (unless used strictly in breeding the shaded, as the himalayans points will be "diluted" and no good as a show rabbit). I don't include steel in the chart due to the fact that the gene responsible for the steel is incompletely dominant. The tort is a basically a black rabbit with the "non-extension" gene, and can be bred with black, chestnut, and fawn. Orange and fawn can be bred to each other or tort. Orange and fawn are "shaded" rabbits and I would think that some people could get good results breeding them to the shaded group.

BKHIMIBLHIMICHHIMILIHIMIORANGE FAWN TORT STEEL
BKHIMIBKHIMIBKHIMIBKHIMIBKHIMICHSTNTCHSTNT BLACKSTEEL
BLHIMIBKHIMIBLHIMIBKHIMIBLHIMICHSTNT OPAL BLACKSTEEL
CHHIMIBKHIMIBKHIMICHHIMICHHIMICHSTNTCHSTNT BLACKSTEEL
LIHIMIBKHIMIBKHIMICHHIMILIHIMICHSTNT OPAL BLACKSTEEL
ORANGECHSTNTCHSTNTCHSTNTCHSTNTORANGEORANGEORANGE****

**** indicates that the majority of the bunnies will be colors not recognized by ARBA

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