| Literature DB >> 15470416 |
Linda Keeling1, Leif Andersson, Karin E Schütz, Susanne Kerje, Robert Fredriksson, Orjan Carlborg, Charles K Cornwallis, Tommaso Pizzari, Per Jensen.
Abstract
Feather-pecking in domestic birds is associated with cannibalism and severe welfare problems. It is a dramatic example of a spiteful behaviour in which the victim's fitness is reduced for no immediate direct benefit to the perpetrator and its evolution is unexplained. Here we show that the plumage pigmentation of a chicken may predispose it to become a victim: birds suffer more drastic feather-pecking when the colour of their plumage is due to the expression of a wild recessive allele at PMEL17, a gene that controls plumage melanization, and when these birds are relatively common in a flock. These findings, obtained using an intercross between a domestic fowl and its wild ancestor, have implications for the welfare of domestic species and offer insight into the genetic changes associated with the evolution of feather-pecking during the early stages of domestication.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15470416 DOI: 10.1038/431645a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962