Abstract
Synopsis An experiment is reported, in which shell weight per unit surface area was measured for eggs laid by pedigreed pullets at 33, 54 and 65 weeks of age, using a Rhode Island Red strain and a White Leghorn strain. Specific gravity and albumen quality were also measured and records of individual egg production were available. The heritability of “shell thickness “ (i.e. shell weight per unit surface area) in the Rhode Island Reds declined from 0.57 in the first period to 0.33 in the last period. The genetic correlation between thickness in the first period and thickness in the last period was 0.90. The relative selection efficiencies expected by basing selection on early shell thickness with the object of improving late shell thickness were greater than 1.0, indicating that early selection would be the best method of improving shell quality in this strain. In the Leghorn flock, estimates of the heritability of shell thickness were low (0.07 to 0.20) and variable. The genetic correlations between thick...
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