Genetic parameters of growth curve parameters in male and female chickens.

1. Individual growth curves of 7143 chickens selected for the form of the growth curve were fitted using the Laird form of the Gompertz function, BW4=BW0xe(L/K)(1-e-Kt) where BWt is the body weight at age t, BW0 the estimated hatching weight, L the initial specific growth rate and K the maturation rate. 2. Line and sex effects were significant for each parameter of the growth curve. In males, L, BW0, age and body weight at inflection (T(I)and BWI) were higher whereas K was lower than in females. Lines selected for high adult body weight had higher BW0 and BW(I) whereas lines selected for high juvenile body weight had larger estimates of L and lower estimates of T(I). 3. Data from 38,474 animals were included in order to estimate the genetic parameters of growth curve parameters in males and females, considering them as sex-limited traits. Genetic parameters were estimated with REML (REstricted Maximum Likelihood) and an animal model. Maternal genetic effects were also included. 4. Heritabilities of the growth curve parameters were moderate to high and ranged between 0.31 and 0.54, L, BW0 in both sexes and BW(I) in males exhibited significant maternal heritability. Heritabilities differed between males and females for BWI and T(I). Genetic correlations between sexes differed significantly from one for all parameters. L, K and T(I) were highly correlated but correlations involving BW0 and BW(I) were low to moderate. 5. Sexual dimorphism of body weight at 8 and 36 weeks and of L, K and T(I) was moderately heritable. Selection on growth curve parameters could modify the difference between sexes in precocity and thus in body weight at a given age.

[1]  S. Gebhardt-Henrich,et al.  Heritabilities of growth curve parameters and age-specific expression of genetic variation under two different feeding regimes in Japanese quail (Coturnix coturnix japonica). , 1993, Genetical research.

[2]  W. Becker,et al.  Growth Patterns of Body and Abdominal Fat Weights in Male Broiler Chickens , 1981 .

[3]  B. B. Bohren,et al.  Logistic growth curve of chickens: heritability of parameters. , 1985, The Journal of heredity.

[4]  R M Gous,et al.  The evaluation of the growth parameters of six strains of commercial broiler chickens. , 1995, British poultry science.

[5]  Laird Ak Postnatal growth of birds and mammals. , 1966 .

[6]  G. Barbato Genetic architecture of carcass composition in chickens. , 1992, Poultry science.

[7]  H. Pasternak,et al.  The effect of a feature of regression disturbance on the efficiency of fitting growth curves. , 1994, Growth, development, and aging : GDA.

[8]  Transformation of poultry egg production data to improve normality, homoscedasticity and linearity of genotypic regression , 1988 .

[9]  Multivariate restricted maximum likelihood estimation of genetic parameters for production traits in three selected turkey strains , 1996, Genetics Selection Evolution.

[10]  F. Ricard,et al.  Essai de sélection sur la forme de la courbe de croissance chez le poulet. Dispositif expérimental et premiers résultats d'ensemble , 1975, Annales de génétique et de sélection animale.

[11]  N. Anthony,et al.  Comparison of growth curves of weight selected populations of turkeys, quail, and chickens. , 1991, Poultry science.

[12]  N. Anthony,et al.  Research note: Influence of body weight selection on the growth curve of turkeys. , 1991, Poultry science.

[13]  R. Ricklefs,et al.  Modification of growth and development of muscles of poultry. , 1985, Poultry science.

[14]  N. Anthony,et al.  Growth Curves of Japanese Quail as Modified by Divergent Selection for 4-Week Body Weight , 1986 .

[15]  Tyler Sa,et al.  Dynamics of normal growth. , 1965 .

[16]  J. Roubíček,et al.  Analysis of growth curves of fowl. I. Chickens. , 1991, British poultry science.

[17]  D. Cox,et al.  An Analysis of Transformations , 1964 .

[18]  K. Meyer Estimates of genetic parameters for mature weight of Australian beef cows and its relationship to early growth and skeletal measures , 1995 .

[19]  J. Sales,et al.  Growth rate of different sexes of the European quail (Coturnix coturnix). , 1997, British poultry science.