rcpreis3
See me as a court jester
I just lost a huge post because I was stupid and hit the back button, but here's a synopsis.
You're all getting genes mixed up with alleles. You can have multiple alleles affecting one gene (aka two alleles are present for each gene, one on each chromosome). So, many of the "single gene" animals you're talking about are actually "single allelic" animals. Let's keep it simple and talk about one codominant trait and one recessive trait.
Recessive traits by nature are double allelic, because they need two identical alleles for a gene to be expressed (ie. clown, pied). Codominant traits are, by nature, single allelic, because you only need one morph allele present to actually generate a morph.
Let's take pied and yellowbelly, for example.
Single allelic (aka 1/2 gene):
yellowbelly
het for pied
Double allelic (aka 1 gene):
blue-eyed leucistic
pied
Triple allelic (aka 1.5 genes):
yellow-bellied pied
Quad allelic (aka 2 genes):
leucistic pied
Hope this clarifies some things. Sometimes the terminology is what screws people up more than anything. A lot of people mistakenly refer to alleles as genes. One allele is only half of a gene.
Just on a side note, yellowbellies make ivories not BELs.
