With all the roosters available, why keep a brother of hens

joebryant

Crowing
11 Years
Apr 28, 2008
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With all the roosters available for any breed, why on Earth would anybody keep the brothers of all their hens for breeding. Surely SOMEONE has a better rooster from a different line to trade with you.
 
One biggie would be not wanting to bring in disease/parasites. (Which are mostly avoidable by getting day-olds or eggs, of course, but then you'd have to get a *bunch* to assure yourself of having a 'keeper' roo among them, and it becomes a bigger undertaking than just going out and buying A Rooster)

Also, if you are selecting for particular traits and have made some headway towards what you're aiming for, it may often not be wise to bring in totally new genetics that will dilute that out. You need *some* at-least-mild outcrossing, but not really very much.

Finally, it is a lot cheaper and easier to just keep your homebreds and if it does not adversely affect the quality of your flock, why not?
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Pat
 
Also, chickens are different than say, dogs or people, in that they can be line bred more without concern of mutations, although it should not be done excessively. Siblings or daughter to sire is acceptable.
 
Mutations can occur no matter the breeding. When you breed two closely related animals the problem is the frequency of undesirable genes. If a flock has been carefully line bred long enough, those undesirables can be culled and you'll be left with nothing but the best genes. Line breeding (which is really just controlled inbreeding) is a great way to establish good genetic stock, however, the first few years might really suck.
 
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Is this because they have fewer genetic diseases? I mean, the transmission of their genetics is the same, isn't it?

I am not sure, but I know that chickens have more chromosomes. Maybe this gives more opportunity for diversity, but that's just me speculating. If you look at how chickens live in the wild, there is more opportunity for inbreeding than in a lot of species of animals, so the fact that seems to work for a bit domestically may relate to that, if that makes sense.

You do have to worry about things like cross beak, which is a feature that seems to show up in lines that have been inbred too much.

Anyone feel free to jump in and add to this because I am in no way an expert and am just speculating on a lot of this.
 
I am not sure whether chickens really have all that much fewer deleterious recessive alleles (although it is *possible*, I just don't know).

One factor that separates chicken-breeding from dogs, horses etc is that it's generally considered a more trivial thing to cull 'defective' individuals, whereas even just a few 'messed up' puppies or foals is a much bigger concern to a typical breeder. Another factor is that you get more offspring, period, from chickens, and because of this, all you really need is a reasonable incidence of GOOD offspring, irrespective of how 'enh' the other ones are.

But really, inbreeding (or linebreeding - I am not trying to get into semantic arguments here
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) is not generally nearly such a terrible thing as most people imagine.

Unless you are for some reason starting with a population that already has a considerable incidence of deleterious recessives (in some cases, that can happen semi-accidentally as a result of breeding hard for certain extreme traits, e.g. in some dog breeds), you actually do not usually need very much nor very frequent injection of 'outside' blood to keep things ticking along quite happily in terms of healthy good-quality offspring. Like, as a *general* rule of thumb, something on the order of one new individual per hundred individuals of population every few generations (not years; *generations*).

Pat
 
Time. It takes lots of energy and time to hatch and grow out new blood and some people, myself included, will NOT purchase adult birds from anyone. Linebreeding and even breeding brother to sister, isn't taboo with chickens. You just rather not do brother to sister very long without new blood-it concentrates both good and bad traits.
 
Inbreeding in poultry has little or no negative effects like it does in higher mammals. Now, if you use the same sire for a dozen generations things are going to get weird on you. But, for casual breeding in the backyard, inbreeding poses no real consequences.
 

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