SOME PHYSIOLOGICAL AND NUTRITIONAL ASPECTS OF THE DWARF CHICKEN
- 1 April 1971
- journal article
- Published by Canadian Science Publishing in Canadian Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 51 (1) , 209-216
- https://doi.org/10.4141/cjas71-028
Abstract
A study was undertaken to investigate the feasibility of hypothyroidism as an explanation for the smaller body size and lower metabolic activity of the recessive sex-linked dwarf chicken. A significant increase in body weight gain and feed intake for dwarf chicks with little change in these parameters for normal chicks receiving a diet supplemented with Protamone (brand name for iodinated casein) suggests a hypothyroidic state for the dwarfs. Similarly, a significantly lower body temperature, oxygen consumption and basal metabolic rate with a higher percentage of carcass fat in dwarf chicks as compared with normal ones supports the above hypothesis. Protamone supplementation of the diet increased body temperature and metabolic rate, and altered the carcass composition of the dwarfs to values closer to that of normal chicks, again suggesting a low thyroxine output for the dwarfs.Keywords
This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Effect of Thyroprotein on Growth Rate of Dwarf PulletsPoultry Science, 1969
- Possible Role of the Thyroid and the Pituitary Glands in Sex-Linked Dwarfism in the Fowl1Endocrinology, 1966
- Effect of Continued Thyroprotein Feeding on Egg ProductionPoultry Science, 1946