SELECTION LIMITS: HAVE THEY BEEN REACHED IN THE POULTRY INDUSTRY?

1984 ◽  
Vol 64 (2) ◽  
pp. 217-221 ◽  
Author(s):  
PETER HUNTON

Present emphasis is on the heavy turkey, grown to relatively heavy body weight and subsequently jointed and further processed. Rapid selection for broad-breasted conformation led to problems in natural mating; hence the fertilization of almost all commercial turkey hatching eggs by artificial insemination. Meat chickens have experienced similar selection for growth and conformation. While reproductive performance has not been affected as much as with turkeys, rate of lay, fertility and hatchability of meat chickens has room for improvement. Increased feed intake, in response to selection for growth improvements has led to increased fat deposition, an unwanted feature. Breeding programs for egg production stocks differ fundamentally from those for meat stocks because they are concerned with multiple objectives. Many of these are of low heritibility and some are antagonistic to others. Because of this, selection intensity for any one trait has not been as high as among meat chickens and turkeys. Selection for increased rate of egg production has often been based on "part record;" since this is measured at a time of maximum lay, this trait approaches what may be regarded as a physiological limit, but not necessarily a genetic one. Persistency of lay, on the other hand, shows potential for further improvement. Egg weight and body weight, as they determine feed efficiency, are discussed, as are egg interval and shell quality. No genetic limit has been reached for any of these traits. The application of genetic disease resistance to Marek's disease, for example, affords considerable scope for future improvements. The large resevoir of genetic diversity, coupled with the use of multiple objectives, suggests that even after 40 years of relatively intense selection, genetic variation does not appear to be exhausted. Key words: Genetics, selection, egg production, broilers, turkeys

Author(s):  
О. М. Гончаренко

Введення в пшенично-кукурудзяно-соєвий комбі-корм у період вирощування ремонтного молодняку (18–23 тижні) і утримання племінних курей (24–51 тиждень) L-треоніну до рівня 0,60 і 0,63 % досто-вірно збільшує: живу масу – на 5,4 %, яйценос-ність – на 5,5 %, заплідненість яєць – на 1,1 %, вивід курчат – на 2,4 %, кількість інкубаційних яєць – на 6,7 % і зменшує витрати корму на 10 інкубаційних яєць на 6,6 %. У разі використання понад норму треоніну для племінних курей в яйці підвищилась як сума амінокислот (замінних і неза-мінних), так і концентрація треоніну – на 6,4 і 12,1 %, по відношенню до контролю, що поглиблює положення про виробництво продуктів харчування з функціональними властивостями. Introduction to the wheat-corn-soybean feed during rearing (18–23 weeks) and the maintenance of breeding chickens (24–51 weeks) L-threonine to the level of 0.60 and 0.63% significantly increased body weight – 5, 4%, egg production – by 5.5%, the fertilized eggs – by 1.1%, the birth of chickens – by 2.4%, the number of hatching eggs – by 6.7% and reduces the cost of feed for 10 hatching eggs by 6.6


2014 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. 769-777 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jolanta Calik

Abstract Over the last decade, there has been an increased consumer interest in niche food products with special aroma and flavour, and rich in nutrients. Poland has a large (19 lines) and valuable collection of laying hens enrolled in the genetic resources conservation programme. Research to date has shown these hen breeds to vary in phenotype, productivity, and biological quality of hatching eggs and meat. A significant problem in using hens for both egg and meat production is that the number of unwanted cockerels increases with increasing intensity of egg production. This problem can be overcome by castration of cockerels. Roosters were sterilized long before Christ, first as a religious ritual and then to increase the body weight of birds. The qualities of capon meat were noticed much later when it turned out to be more delicate, juicy and tender compared to rooster meat. The aim of this paper was to review the literature on capon production, including the effects of castration on the bird’s body and on the quality of meat obtained.


2017 ◽  
Vol 52 (2) ◽  
pp. 222
Author(s):  
M. Shanmugam ◽  
M. Niranjan ◽  
K. Rakesh ◽  
T.K. Bhattacharya ◽  
B.L.N. Reddy ◽  
...  

1981 ◽  
Vol 71 (3) ◽  
pp. 533-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. S. Gray

AbstractThe egg production of females of Ixodes ricinus (L.) was found to be closely related to the engorged body weight. The relationship was due almost entirely to the size of the blood-meal. Smaller ticks seemed to be slightly more efficient than larger ones in converting their blood-meal to eggs. Ticks, especially larvae, that overwintered in diapause did not survive as well as those that fed and then moulted in the same year. Larvae that fed and entered diapause early in the autumn did not survive as well as those that fed later in the season. A very high proportion of tick eggs hatched, either in the same year as they were laid or after overwintering. Almost all nymphs and adults became active and climbed to the top of the tubes after moulting. Although most larvae appeared to become active, only about half of them reached the tops of the tubes. This is thought to be a reflection on the fact that larvae are adapted to parasitise small rodents. It is suggested that winter temperatures may play an important part in determining the mortality rate of larvae that overwinter in the engorged state.


2005 ◽  
Vol 2005 ◽  
pp. 9-9
Author(s):  
A. D. Kranis ◽  
J. A. Woolliams ◽  
W. G. Hill ◽  
P. M. Hocking

The major selection criterion in the turkey breeding industry is increased breast muscle and body weight in order to adapt to market demands. In female lines a dual selection for both body weight and egg production is performed. However, most published estimates indicate a variable correlation between growth and egg number (Nestor et al., 1996) and so the challenge posed is how to best to select for those opposing goals. The objective of this study was to investigate the effects of simultaneous selection for body weight and egg number by estimating the genetic parameters for a research population held by a commercial company in two different locations.


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