I understand the benefit of linebreeding. However, its merits aren't as easily achieved when working with species that don't breed until their second, third, or fourth year, and don't produce as many offspring. It does work well with species like domesticated poultry, which have been selected for increased production, and which mature early enough to reproduce at younger ages. I mean, it's still
possible, but it takes much longer.
That's why the parrot species undergoing linebreeding are those that are basically domesticated and bred for show -- budgerigars, cockatiels, perhaps some
Agapornis species, maybe a
Psittacula species or two. My Sammy is a double-yellow headed
amazon (
Amazona oratrix), and they don't reach sexual maturity until they're at least five years old, then often take a couple of years before bonding and setting about making babies. When they do breed, clutches are no more than four or five, if you're lucky. And they don't necessarily breed every year. This works for them because they live a long time -- they don't need to churn out a lot of babies each year because they have decades' worth of opportunities to succeed. Sammy is already almost 28, and he's not old. I do know one breeder who has been selectively-breeding for increased yellow markings in two different subspecies of Sammy's species, and he has some impressive results. But in about 30 years, he's achieved four or five generations. That's not an efficient time-frame for linebreeding success within one person's lifetime.
Monkey-Boy, my budgerigar I found outside almost four years ago, is another story. His species can breed in their first year, having multiple clutches per year. It wouldn't take long to produce enough offspring with his species to have a nice-sized group from which to choose "the best" to continue linebreeding. And budgerigar breeders have done this extensively -- show-quality budgerigars are very different-looking from average pet-store birds like Monkey-Boy, and even more-so from the original wild budgerigars.
I dunno, though, about selecting for production-qualities in peafowl. It seems to me that that would take away some of what makes them special, and turn them into just another domesticated species of poultry. It's been my perception that people enjoy peafowl because they bring a bit of exotic beauty to the land. They're wild-enough to live free-range and roost in trees. When you select for production, or size, or confirmation to some arbitrary standard some people decided upon, you start turning them into chickens. And that's not a knock on chickens -- they're pretty interesting as well. But we already have chickens.
