"i know supers are dom."
Actually super is just our industry term for a homozygous co-dominant. Not sure if we'll use it for a homozygous dominant animal if we ever prove one but I'm thinking not.
Please try not to propagate the misuse of "dominant form" where "homozygous" should be used. "Dominant" is a mutation type and the mutation type doesn't change depending on if you are looking at a heterozygous or a homozygous example of a mutation. For example, pastel is a co-dominant mutation because of the way a heterozygous pastel looks in relation to a homozygous pastel (both mutants but different from each other). The mutation type doesn't change from co-dominant to dominant depending on if you are looking at a pastel or a super pastel.