Abstract
A line (F) of turkeys was selected over 30 generations for increased 16-wk BW. The base population for the F line was a randombred control population (RBC2) that was maintained without conscious selection and used to remove yearly environmental variation in the F line. Selection was effective in increasing 16-wk BW in the F line. Selection differentials based on the mean of selected parents minus mean of entire population (intended) and intended selection differentials weighted for number of offspring produced (actual) did not consistently differ, indicating that natural selection was not significantly opposing artificial selection. The realized heritability (h2) of 16-wk BW in the F line, based on the linear regression of the selection response on accumulated actual selection differentials, declined with selection; the decline appeared to be slightly different for males than females. For both sexes combined, the realized h2 was 0.309+/-0.022 (SE), 0.268+/-0.033, 0.242+/-0.026, and 0.254+/-0.007, respectively, for Generations 1 to 10, 11 to 20, 21 to 30, and 1 to 30. Genetic increases in 16-wk BW in the F line were positively associated with BW at other ages (8, 20, and 24 wk of age and at 50% production), days from stimulatory lighting to production of the first egg, and egg weight. Genetic increases were negatively associated with egg production, intensity of lay (maximum and average clutch length and rate of lay), and hatch of fertile eggs. There was no significant relationship between 16-wk BW and total days lost from broodiness or fertility. The genetic changes in some correlated traits were not consistent in all generation intervals studied, indicating that the genetic correlation between the selected trait (16 wk BW) and the correlated trait changed with selection.
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