I saw similar results when I had a vigorous, dominant male in a breeding pen with two pullets for several weeks. The hatch was 2:1 males to females. It's a very small sample size, but it reminded me of something I had read in an old poultry breeding guide, "The A.B.C. of Breeding Poultry for Exhibition, Egg Production and Table Purposes" by William Powell-Owen. It suggests that the hatch will be skewed toward males when a vigorous under-mated male is bred with pullets. Under-mated would mean the male is only with a very small number of pullets.
Here's the quote: "Whichever parent is the weaker, there will be, by a natural law, less of that sex in the offspring. In short, the stronger sex predominates in the progeny." . . . "Where a young vigorous cockerel is mated to pullets, the male sex will predominate and if the male is undermated the same will be the result. If I were desirous of securing more pullets than cockerels I would make adult cocks to pullets."
I don't know if this has ever been tested. It could be an old wives tale, or it could be the voice of experience from folks who routinely bred poultry years ago. It's interesting that the rest of my hatches have been close to a 1:1 sex ratio and those eggs were collected from hens who were free-ranging with roosters at a 1:10 ratio, which meant the males were not under-mated.
Here's the quote: "Whichever parent is the weaker, there will be, by a natural law, less of that sex in the offspring. In short, the stronger sex predominates in the progeny." . . . "Where a young vigorous cockerel is mated to pullets, the male sex will predominate and if the male is undermated the same will be the result. If I were desirous of securing more pullets than cockerels I would make adult cocks to pullets."
I don't know if this has ever been tested. It could be an old wives tale, or it could be the voice of experience from folks who routinely bred poultry years ago. It's interesting that the rest of my hatches have been close to a 1:1 sex ratio and those eggs were collected from hens who were free-ranging with roosters at a 1:10 ratio, which meant the males were not under-mated.
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Very interesting