Browsing by Author "Harrison, S. J."
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Population dynamics of a long-term selection experiment in White Plymouth Rock chickens selected for low or high body weightHarrison, S. J.; Siegel, Paul B.; Honaker, C. F.; Lewis, R. M. (Elsevier, 2023-05)The population dynamics of 2 lines of chickens from a long-term (59 generations) selection experiment were assessed based on pedigree data. These lines were propagated from phenotypic selection for low and high 8-wk BW in White Plymouth Rock chickens. Our objective was to determine whether the 2 lines maintained similar population structures over the selec-tion horizon to allow meaningful comparisons of their performance data. A complete pedigree of 31,909 indi-viduals, consisting of 102 founders, 1,064 from the parental generation, and 16,245 low weight (LWS) and 14,498 high weight (HWS) select chickens, was avail-able. Inbreeding (F) and average relatedness (AR) coef-ficients were computed. Average F per generation and AR coefficients were 1.3 (SD 0.8) % and 0.53 (SD 0.001) for LWS, and 1.5 (SD 1.1) % and 0.66 (SD 0.001) for HWS. Mean F for the entire pedigree was 0.26 (0.16) and 0.33 (0.19), and maximum F was 0.64 and 0.63, in LWS and HWS, respectively. Based on Wright's fixation index, at generation 59, substantial genetic differences were established between lines. The effective population size was 39 in LWS and 33 in HWS. The effective num-ber of founders was 17 and 15, effective number of ances-tors were 12 and 8, and genome equivalents were 2.5 and 1.9 in LWS and HWS, respectively. About 30 founders explained the marginal contribution to both lines. By generation 59, only 7 male and 6 female founders con-tributed to both lines. Moderately high levels of inbreed-ing and low effective population sizes were inevitable, as this was a closed population. However, effects on the fit-ness of the population were expected to be less substan-tial because founders were a combination of 7 lines. The effective numbers of founders and ancestors were rela-tively low compared to the actual number of founders, as few ancestors contributed to descendants. Based on these evaluations, it can be inferred that LWS and HWS had similar population structures. Comparisons of selec-tion responses in the 2 lines therefore should be reliable.