A primary linkage map of the domestic turkey (Meleagris gallopavo) was developed by segregation analysis of genetic markers within a backcross family. This reference family includes 84 offspring from one F1 sire mated to two dams. Genomic DNA was digested using one of five restriction enzymes, and restriction fragment length polymorphisms were detected on Southern blots using probes prepared from 135 random clones isolated from a whole-embryo cDNA library. DNA sequence was subsequently determined for 114 of these cDNA clones. Sequence comparisons were done using BLAST searches of the GenBank database, and redundant sequences were eliminated. High similarity was found between 23% of the turkey sequences and mRNA sequences reported for the chicken. The current map, based on expressed genes, includes 138 loci, encompassing 113 loci arranged into 22 linkage groups and an additional 25 loci that remain unlinked. The average distance between linked markers is 6 cM and the longest linkage group (17 loci) measures 131 cM. The total map distance contained within linkage groups is 651 cM. The present map provides an important framework for future genome mapping in the turkey.
Our objectives were to evaluate: 1) the efficacy of the Sperm Mobility Test on commercial turkey farms, and 2) the influence of sperm mobility phenotype on fertility when insemination parameters are varied. In research flocks, differences in sperm mobility among toms are predictive of fertility. We wanted to test the efficacy of this sire selection test in practical, real-world situations, evaluating its usefulness in terms of assessing large numbers of toms, different strains of turkeys, and variable management practices. Utilizing field study results, controlled studies were then conducted to improve test parameters. For the field trials, semen from each of 405 breeder toms (11 strains or lines) was evaluated either in duplicate (n = 285) or in triplicate (n = 120). Sperm mobility was normally distributed among all toms tested, except for one strain. Because the sperm mobility indices for toms evaluated in these field trials were higher than those observed in research flocks, the Sperm Mobility Test was modified to increase the separation between high and low sperm mobility phenotypes by increasing the concentration of Accudenz. To determine the effects of sperm mobility and insemination dose on sustained fertility through time, hens from a research flock were inseminated twice before the onset of lay with sperm from toms classified as high-, average-, or low-mobility in concentrations of 25 to 400 million sperm per artificial insemination dose, and egg fertility was evaluated over a 5-wk period. Toms with the high-mobility sperm phenotype maintained higher fertility (P < 0.05) over the 5-wk period at all insemination doses compared with toms with low-mobility sperm. Toms with high-mobility sperm sired equal numbers of poults in a sperm competition study in which numbers favored low-mobility toms by 3:1. These results demonstrate that the Sperm Mobility Test can be used for on-farm evaluation of semen quality of toms in commercial flocks and that sperm mobility influences fertility and sire fitness.
Fluid was withdrawn from the site of regressing Rous sarcomas in chickens and inoculated into the wing-webs of untreated chickens from three strains of chickens with divergent degrees of resistance to Rous sarcomas. The transfer of fluid initiated progressive tumors in all three strains of chickens. The infectivity of the fluid was apparently due to tumor cells and not to virus.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.