Poultry Science (Jun 2020)

Divergent selection for relative breast yield at 4 D posthatch and the effect on embryonic and early posthatch development

  • J.G. Mason,
  • A.D. Gilley,
  • S.K. Orlowski,
  • N.B. Anthony

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 99, no. 6
pp. 2888 – 2894

Abstract

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Genetic selections for growth promotion in poultry have been highly successful in improving growth, yield, and feed conversion in the modern broiler. These selections have focused on the use of hypertrophy, the increase of muscle fiber size to improve growth. Muscle growth however is not limited solely to hypertrophy but is largely attributable to both hypertrophy and hyperplasia, the increase in muscle fiber number. As muscle fiber size has been theorized to reach an eventual physiological limit, it was determined to develop a novel method of selection focusing on hyperplasia. Divergent selection for 4-day relative breast yield (BY4) was chosen as it is believed to occur at point at which muscle cell number per gram is maximized and satellite cell activity is higher than later in life. Using a random bred control population, divergent selection was undergone for BY4. The 2 broiler lines divergently selected for BY4 are noted as the high and low BY4 lines, respectively (high 4-day breast yield and low 4-day breast yield). Heritability estimates for selection of 4-day breast percentage in the upward and downward directions were 0.63 and 0.44, respectively. Divergent selection resulted in clear divergence in BY4 and shows promise in utilizing BY4 to promote broiler growth and body composition.

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