Abstract
In recent decades, interest in non-traditionally colored eggs has increased. For breeders, this market interest means breeding lines of laying hens that lay eggs of varied colors, such as the blue-green eggshells (Dominant Greenshell) in this study. This study presents the results of genotyping the polymorphism of the O locus responsible for shell coloration and photometric measurement of eggshell color based on the CIELAb system, which was carried out on the unique Czech breeding population Dominant Greenshell. The aim was to use a combination of phenotyping using the CIELab System method and genotyping of the O locus using the end-point PCR approach with the main focus on the accuracy of distinguishing shell color genotypes, streamlining the selection of dominant homozygotes in the O locus, optimizing this technology for the most efficient and cost-effective selection procedure in practical hen breeding. The optometric method was able to reliably distinguish only dominant and recessive phenotypes and eliminate from the population only undesirable recessive homozygotes with a white colored shell. The parameter a* (redness/greenness) from the CIELab color space turned out to be absolutely key for distinguishing dominant and recessive phenotypes. Using the CART methodology, a classification tree built on discriminating optometric characteristics a-blunt was obtained, however, for the group of desirable O/O homozygotes, the selection approach would result in incorrect genotyping of 31% of individuals. Therefore, a combined approach based on rapid and simple elimination of recessive homozygotes using phenotyping (CIELab photometric measurement) and molecular identification of the EAV-HP insertion in the SLCO1B3 gene in dominant phenotypes, regardless of color intensity affected by laying time/order, and allowing reliable elimination, has proven to be the most effective method to distinguish heterozygotes from the breeding population. The combination of optometric and molecular selection methods then leads to more efficient selection, reduction of overall selection costs. This process led to the stabilization of the breeding population within one generation and the achievement of a pure homozygous line with regard to eggshell color.
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