What happens to that population, inevitably, is three things:
1) You lose fertility and fecundity (both the ability of the male and female to produce offspring and the numbers of those offspring who are born). That's very obvious in chicken strains, where low hatchability and low egg production and, in many strains, low vigor of newly hatched chicks plague many of the show-bred birds.
I wonder how the (very vigorous) flock of Heritage Barred Rocks from late 1800s - early 1900s still exists today, with no "new blood" added.
1) You lose fertility and fecundity (both the ability of the male and female to produce offspring and the numbers of those offspring who are born). That's very obvious in chicken strains, where low hatchability and low egg production and, in many strains, low vigor of newly hatched chicks plague many of the show-bred birds.
I wonder how the (very vigorous) flock of Heritage Barred Rocks from late 1800s - early 1900s still exists today, with no "new blood" added.
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