OK, I'm going to preface this by saying that I know nothing about chicken genetics other than some basic egg color info. All my genetics lessons have been from dairy cattle. In cows, you can increase milk production by using a good bull because the milk production genes come from both parents. If I wanted to increase egg size and laying frequency in a line of chickens, how would I go about it?
I have a rooster that came from an incredibly blue egg, but his mom (what is the "mom" in chickens, anyway? I mean, in horses you have a sire and a dam...) doesn't lay very large eggs or very many eggs. Can I mate this rooster to some white Leghorns, then when those chicks grow up, see who lays the most, biggest, bluest eggs and breed her back to the father and so on and so forth to fix the blue egg, size and frequency genes? Or, for example, are there pitfalls that I'm not seeing like some sex-linked traits so that the parent I use for egg size ought to be the male, or something similar?
I realize that this is probably more complex that that, so if anyone has any book or link suggestions, that would be most excellent as well.
(Oh, and I already know you can line breed chickens in a way you can't with horses and cows. That's... kind of cool, actually.)
Many thanks!
I have a rooster that came from an incredibly blue egg, but his mom (what is the "mom" in chickens, anyway? I mean, in horses you have a sire and a dam...) doesn't lay very large eggs or very many eggs. Can I mate this rooster to some white Leghorns, then when those chicks grow up, see who lays the most, biggest, bluest eggs and breed her back to the father and so on and so forth to fix the blue egg, size and frequency genes? Or, for example, are there pitfalls that I'm not seeing like some sex-linked traits so that the parent I use for egg size ought to be the male, or something similar?
I realize that this is probably more complex that that, so if anyone has any book or link suggestions, that would be most excellent as well.
(Oh, and I already know you can line breed chickens in a way you can't with horses and cows. That's... kind of cool, actually.)
Many thanks!
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