I'm pretty sure that, unless you are mistaken about which form of the albino (tyrosinase) gene the parents are carrying, any kitten from that particular pairing can only be color point (lynx), not sepia or mink (as all occur at the same genetic locus). As each of the parents is normally colored, they are heterozygous for whichever albino gene they are carrying and only carry one copy of it. That means that each kitten can have one of four combinations, homozygous normal, heterozygous normal carrying the father's albino copy, heterozygous normal carrying the mother's albino copy, and homozygous albino (with one copy of whatever mom has, and one copy of whatever dad has). So if both parents carry lynx, every albino kitten MUST be lynx. If both carry sepia, every albino kitten MUST be sepia. And last, if they carry a mix and match of lynx and sepia, every albino kitten MUST be seal.Originally Posted by Kai Bengals
Loki is her father, her mother is Kenya. They are both brown spotted, but carry for snow (seal). Out of the litter of six, she is the only snow bengal.
All seal lynx point bengals have blue eyes, so her eyes will remain blue, unless she fools us and is really a seal mink. In a perfect world, if she were seal mink her eyes would have turned green already. So, I'm pretty confident she is a seal lynx.
If you were unsure about what the parents were carrying, you should know for sure now (at least down to what the pair carry collectively).