Quote:
While I understand what you're saying here, I don't understand why you wouldn't sell these to a breeder with full disclosure (as if they couldn't look at the birds and see the flaw(s) as to what they're getting into. If you originally bred their parents and some of the babies have a genetic flaw, then some of your breeding stock already has a genetic flaw and you're still breeding them. Would you cull the parent birds too?
Depends on the birds and situation. I may cull the parent(s?) as well; if it were something very important to me I would work with the good offspring, raise a lot, and cull everything with a strict standard over periods of generations until it rarely showed (if it ever showed).
Many lines have flaws hidden somewhere, some more than others. I wouldn't sell them to breeders because only an irresponsible breeder would breed birds in those situations, does it effect them? Maybe not, but it will effect the people who receive birds from them.
Kind of like German Shepherds, a lot have the hip dysplasia problems which to my knowledge is a genetic issue. The individuals that show it aren't (at least shouldn't) used for breeding, but the whole lines aren't culled.
-Daniel.
Again though I say: It depends on the birds and situations.