Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 June 2012
The concept of heritability is discussed in relation to the climatic changes which may affect the variations of age at sexual maturity in the fowl, and it is suggested that genetic and environmental variance, as expressed in the customary statistical formulation, may be largely synonymous terms.
Four groups of Brown Leghorn pullets are compared, one subject to no artificial lighting and the sub-optimal conditions of war years, a second to restricted lighting, and a third and fourth to 14-hour day length. The formal estimates of genetic and environmental variance were respectively 910 and 978, 594 and 546, 188 and 295, and 56 and 135. Further reduction of variability is apparent on subdivision into early and late hatches, heritability being apparently zero in the first case but maintained at an average level in the second.
Changes in variability substantiate the presence of genotype-environment interactions as previously reported, and similar conclusions follow from heterogeneity of regressions of age at maturity on date of hatch.
This paper was assisted in publication by a grant from the Carnegie Trust for the Universities of Scotland.