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Hybrids generated by crossing elite laying chickens exhibited heterosis for clutch and egg quality traits

Authors :
Jing Fan
Panlin Wang
Hui Ma
Aixin Ni
Lei Shi
Linlin Jiang
Adamu Mani Isa
Ziyan Huang
Dongli Li
Jilan Chen
Yunlei Li
Yanyan Sun
Source :
Poultry Science, Poultry Science, Vol 99, Iss 12, Pp 6332-6340 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Crossbreeding advantage in hybrids compared with their parents, termed heterosis, has been exhaustively exploited in chicken breeding over the last century. Reports for crossbreeding of elite laying chickens covering rearing and laying period remain infrequent. In this study, resource populations of Rhode Island Red (RIR) and White Leghorn (WL) pure-bred chickens were reciprocally crossed to generate 4 distinct groups that were evaluated for prelaying growth, egg production, and egg quality. Birds monitored for prelaying growth consists of 105 (RIR), 131 (WL), 207 (RIR × WL) and 229 (WL × RIR), and 30 pullets from each group were evaluated. Egg laying records were collected from 102, 89, 147, and 191 hens in the 4 populations, respectively. In addition, expression of 5 candidate genes for egg production in the ovarian follicles was measured by RT-qPCR. Results showed that BW of hatched chicks in the WL line was higher than the other populations. However, the 2 crossbreds grew faster than WL purebred throughout the prelaying period. Low to medium heterosis was observed for BW and body length before the onset of lay. White Leghorn and the hybrids commenced laying earlier than RIR pullets and egg production traits were favorable in the crossbreds compared with purebreds. Heterosis for egg number and clutch size was moderate in WL × RIR but low in RIR × WL hens. Expression of antimullerian hormone gene was high in WL and RIR × WL hybrids, suggesting WL parent-specific enhancing dominant expression. Shell weight was higher in the crossbreds than purebreds at 52 wk of age, but RIR hens laid eggs with higher shell ratio than the other populations (P

Details

ISSN :
00325791
Volume :
99
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Poultry Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c5281a333fae1e7e0e6e6943e8461872
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2020.08.056