- Thread starter
- #11
Seriously, so much good information here. Thank you! And it makes sense that some of the people I’ve read about are probably judging by their eyes and don’t actually know what’s hidden in the genes.I believe that is mostly false, but I can think of a few sort-of exceptions:
--sex linked traits are on the Z sex chromosome. A rooster passes that to both his sons and his daughters. A hen passes her Z chromosome to her sons, but W to her daughters. So for any trait on the Z chromosome, a hen can NOT pass it to her daughters. She gets it from her father, and gives it to her sons. A rooster may get it from his father or his mother, and pass it to his sons or his daughters. Several important genes are on the Z chromosome (silver/gold, barring, chocolate, light vs. dark skin, fast/slow feathering.)
--homozygous vs. heterozygous. If a given chicken is homozygous (pure) for a certain trait, they will pass it to all of their offspring. If they are heterozygous (split or impure), they will pass that trait to only about half of their offspring. If someone happens to have homozygous birds of one sex, and heterozygous ones of the other sex, I can see how a rumor like this might get started.
--dominant vs. recessive traits. If someone crosses a chicken with a dominant trait, and one with a recessive trait, of course they are going to see the dominant trait in the chicks. But they might think that is "the mother's trait" or "the father's trait," instead of understanding dominant & recessive.
--a rooster can generally sire many more chicks than the number of eggs a hen can lay. So if you need one chicken to pass a certain trait to a large number of offspring, you probably want that one chicken to be male.
If there is a particular trait that is very important, I might do it first. Examples might be a certain comb type to avoid frostbite in cold weather, or high egg production so there are more eggs to hatch.
After that, I would probably start with the things that are genetically simplest. It's fairly easy to breed out rose comb or a crest on the head (one gene each), but much harder to breed for the correct shape of rose comb or a correctly shaped crest.
Some things have to work in certain orders. For example, if you want a laced chicken, you might have to breed out the gene for solid black before you can see the lacing to work on the quality of it.
With being either heterozygous or homozygous, I’ve heard there’s only 2 real ways to figure this out - 1. Breed and see what the offspring are, or 2. Be able to prove/guarantee the pureness of that breed/line for that specific trait. Is there another way to do this?