1970
DOI: 10.1017/s0016672300001622
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Association of genetic polymorphisms with embryonic mortality in the chicken: II. The B blood-group system and the pure and crossbred progeny of two populations

Abstract: We have studied the association of the ten possible B blood-group genotypes with mortality during incubation in the 1966 generation of two relatively noninbred populations of Light Sussex chickens. These were related substrains 6D and 6F derived in the 1964 generation by equal division of strain 6, which we had previously studied in its 1962 generation. The B blood-group genotypes of zygotes but not of dams were associated with marked mortality differences in 6F, while in 6D almost no differences were found. C… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
5
0

Year Published

1970
1970
1980
1980

Publication Types

Select...
8
2

Relationship

0
10

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 11 publications
(5 citation statements)
references
References 20 publications
0
5
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Apart from certain specific relationships with disease resistance (see Section (v) below) the general trend of results has been variable and inconsistent like the allozyme data. There is fairly general agreement among authors on associations of B locus variation with fitness and production traits (Gilmour, 1960;Briles, 1960;Gilmour, 1962;Allen and Gilmour, 1962;Morton et al, 1965;Gilmour and Morton, 1970;Nordskog, Rishell and Briggs, 1973). While heterozygote advantage was common at the B, C, L and N loci, homozygote advantage was reported at the A locus (Gilmour, 1960;De Silva, 1965), but Seet and Briles' (1970) results indicated heterozygote advantage of A sires and homozygote advantage of B sires for egg hatchability and sire fertility respectively.…”
Section: (Ii) Quantitative Geneticsmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Apart from certain specific relationships with disease resistance (see Section (v) below) the general trend of results has been variable and inconsistent like the allozyme data. There is fairly general agreement among authors on associations of B locus variation with fitness and production traits (Gilmour, 1960;Briles, 1960;Gilmour, 1962;Allen and Gilmour, 1962;Morton et al, 1965;Gilmour and Morton, 1970;Nordskog, Rishell and Briggs, 1973). While heterozygote advantage was common at the B, C, L and N loci, homozygote advantage was reported at the A locus (Gilmour, 1960;De Silva, 1965), but Seet and Briles' (1970) results indicated heterozygote advantage of A sires and homozygote advantage of B sires for egg hatchability and sire fertility respectively.…”
Section: (Ii) Quantitative Geneticsmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…A possible association between a bursa antigen and susceptibility to leukosis-sarcoma virus is being investigated. Gilmour and Morton (1970) studied the association of the ten possible B blood-group genotypes with mortality during incubation in two noninbred populations of Light Sussex chickens. The results indicated that the selective pressures on the B locus from differential embryonic mortality vary from generation to generation and even between populations that differ only slightly in environment and genetic composition.…”
Section: New York University Medical School New York New York 10016mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Such epistasis is measurable with suitable experimental design. For example, associations may be sought between groups of polymorphic loci and components of fitness, as we have already done (Morton et al, 1965;Gilmour and Morton, 1970). Another approach is to analyse the forms of epistasis in the control of continuously varying traits over a wide range of genotypes, to see which forms are associated with traits determining fitness; in this context the observation of balancing dominance and dominance x dominance interaction effects (Morton, 1964) is of obvious significance.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%