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Original Articles

Can testosterone and corticosterone predict the rate of display of male sexual behaviour, development of secondary sexual characters and fertility potential in primary broiler breeders?

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Pages 621-625 | Accepted 28 May 2005, Published online: 21 Aug 2006
 

Abstract

1.

Genetic selection for growth to enhance production may be associated with stress and with modified physiological and behavioural phenotypes which depress male primary broiler breeder fertility.

2.

We hypothesised that male serum testosterone (T) and corticosterone (C) concentrations might correlate with fertility, sexual behaviour, and testicular, comb and wattle size.

3.

Cockerels from two genetic strains (A and B) of primary broiler breeder were penned individually with an average of 10 females across 5 age periods (30 to 51 weeks) to evaluate male fertility, behaviour, serum T and C, and comb, wattle and testicular dimensions.

4.

Strain A males had higher T at age periods 2, 4 and 5 than Strain B. Both strains had basal concentrations of C, apart from an elevated concentration for Strain B in period 5.

5.

Strain B had a weak but significant, positive correlation between sexual behaviour and T and C, while Strain A males with higher C had larger combs and wattles.

6.

Neither T nor C correlated with fertility. We conclude that evaluation of these endocrine factors (quantifiable measurements with the potential to correlate with fertility) alone seems insufficient to predict male fertility potential in these strains of primary broiler breeder.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank David Pollock for his input and for granting the opportunity to conduct this research. We are grateful to Dr Estelle Russek-Cohen, Department of Animal and Avian Sciences, University of Maryland at College Park, for her invaluable statistical consultation. The work was supported by a grant provided by the US Poultry and Egg Association (Project #449).

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