Abstract
Three hundred mother–daughter pairs were analyzed for seven attributes related to courtship and reproduction. Only the lag time from first courtship to copulation was significantly heritable; genetic correlations involving this attribute were not significant. The genetic correlation between fertility and lag time to first courtship was negative and significant. However, this genetic correlation is expected to have little impact on the retention of additive genetic variance or on response to selection because it involves two attributes with low heritabilities. The pattern of phenotypic covariation among traits is largely explained by environmental causes and is consistent with that found in a previous analysis of father–son pairs (Gromko, 1987).