Quantitative genetic analysis of causal relationships among feather pecking, feather eating, and general locomotor activity in laying hens using structural equation models

The objective of this research was to analyze the relationship between feather pecking (FP) and feather eating (FE) as well as general locomotor activity (GLA) using structural equation models, which allow that one trait can be treated as an explanatory variable of another trait. This provides an op...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Poultry science Vol. 95; no. 8; pp. 1757 - 1763
Main Authors: Lutz, V., Kjaer, J. B., Iffland, H., Rodehutscord, M., Bessei, W., Bennewitz, J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: England Poultry Science Association, Inc 01-08-2016
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Summary:The objective of this research was to analyze the relationship between feather pecking (FP) and feather eating (FE) as well as general locomotor activity (GLA) using structural equation models, which allow that one trait can be treated as an explanatory variable of another trait. This provides an opportunity to infer putative causal links among the traits. For the analysis, 897 F2-hens set up from 2 lines divergently selected for high and low FP were available. The FP observations were Box-Cox transformed, and FE and GLA observations were log and square root transformed, respectively. The estimated heritabilities of FE, GLA, and FP were 0.36, 0.29, and 0.20, respectively. The genetic correlation between FP and FE (GLA) was 0.17 (0.04). A high genetic correlation of 0.47 was estimated between FE and GLA. The recursive effect from FE to FP was $\smash{\hat\lambda} _{\it FP,FE} = 0.258$ , and from GLA to FP $\smash{\hat\lambda} _{\it FP,GLA} = 0.046$ . These results imply that an increase of FE leads to an increased FP behavior and that an increase in GLA results in a higher FP value. Furthermore, the study showed that the genetic correlation among the traits is mainly caused by indirect effects.
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content type line 23
ISSN:0032-5791
1525-3171
DOI:10.3382/ps/pew146