George, you'll love this one. I read your response and had a V8 moment. I had read a possible reason just needed to find the article.
http://m.jeb.biologists.org/content/217/5/682.full
If you exchange disease resistance for the mention of height, this article on additive inheritance might explain a genetic reason: http://bowlingsite.mcf.com/Genetics/GenSize.html
Given the life of some birds- if they survive that, they're probably a very hardy line. It's one thing to survive when kept in the best of conditions- such an individual does have a lot going for it. But to survive and even fight off disease when diet, environment, disease exposure level, climate, stress, etc of the individual (and it's ancestors) is difficult speaks even more.
Giving chickens the best of care is commendable and is best for the individual bird, but it can sometimes be detrimental to the flock, breed or species. Sometimes a hard life is good.
Resistant does not mean an individual will never get sick just that it is less likely to get sick than the average. If it does get sick the odds are that it will be a lighter case. Susceptible is more likely to get sick than average and will be sicker.
Thank you for this. I will check this out this evening.
I opened up Genetics of the Fowl ( F.B. Hutt) this morning. There is a chapter on this subject. It is an older book, and some information may be outdated, but it is easy to read. The fundamentals are there. It is a good read.