1. Genetics of lipid deposition in the Japanese quail
- Author
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J. A. Cherry, J. M. F. Wyatt, and P. B. Siegel
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Heterosis ,Lean tissue ,General Medicine ,Body weight ,Quail ,Animal science ,Endocrinology ,biology.animal ,Internal medicine ,Genetic variation ,Genetics ,Abdominal fat ,medicine ,Lipid deposition ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,Biotechnology ,Hybrid - Abstract
The research presented here was designed to investigate the mode of inheritance of fat and lean tissue deposition, and the relationship between them and body weight in Japanese quail. Heterotic effects were found for weight, size, and number of adipocytes in the abdominal fat depots, weight of the sartorial fat depot and percentage carcass fat with means for the hybrids being lower than those for the parental lines. General inferences concerning the importance of nonadditive genetic variation for lean and body weight were precluded due to inconsistencies observed among mating combinations. Thus, although heterosis and recombination effects were general for characteristics associated with fat deposition, the situation for body weight and lean was unique to the populations involved. It may be hypothesized that heterosis in the efficiency of feed utilization is reflected by the heterosis for fat deposition which explains why hybrids utilize feed better than their parental lines.
- Published
- 1982
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