Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1970, Side 29

Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1970, Side 29
COLOUR INHERITANCE IN ICELANDIC SHEEP 27 These animals were purchased in autumn 1959 from private flocks in Southern Ice- land. Arrangements were made with a pri- vate farmer in the area at a farm called Skeidháholt to manage the flock and keep close record of all the sheep, under the supervision of the author. This flock was maintained at the same size on the sante farm until autumn 1963, when it was dis- persech In the foundation flock, 23 of the ewe lambs were grey mouflon and 2 grey badgerface. Three of the ram larnbs were grey mou- flon, and one grey badgerface. A fifth ram lamb which was also purchased was black with a white head spot, white collar and stockings (colour 0562). The last ram was purchased in order to investigate the in- heritance ol the white collar. It was also expected that several homozygous black mouflon animals would be produced in the course of the experiment, and if the black mouflon pattern and the white collar could be combined in the same ani- mal, the resulting skin woukl have white edges and be otherwise black, a colour which might be of sorne commercial value in skins used for decorative purpose as rugs. This goal was not, however, achieved during the course of the experiments. The first lambs thought to be homo- zygous grey out of this flock were obtain- ed in spring 1960, when 3 grey ewe lambs were born, 2 of them very liglitgrey, and one darkgrey. The 2 lightgrey ewe lambs were so light coloured that their pelts were of no value for the fur trade. These lambs indicated that the lightgrey animals which often were obtained in darkgrey X darkgrey mat- ings would often be homozygous, and that because of their light colour they would always have been culled. The third grey lamb which was of the desired darkgrey colour and was also thought to be homozygous indicated that darkgrey homozygous animals might also be found. From interviews with farmers who had ownecl grey mouflon sheep, it had been learned, however, that two types of grey mouflon might exist, one in which the colour was produced by the gene for grey from one parent and the mouflon gene frorn the other, and another type where the grey mouflon pattern was pro- duced by one gene which had the sum effect of the other two. An indication of this was first seen by the author at a sheep sorting station in Eastern Iceland in autumn 1959, where a black ewe with a grey mouflon lamb was observed. The owner of the ewe informed him that this lamb was by a grey mouflon ranr which he owned, and that this ram sired alternatively black and grey mouflon progeny when mated to black ewes. As the owner dicl not keep accurate records of his sheep, this ram could not be investi- gated further. In the autumn 1960 it was discovered that a grey mouflon ewe on farm 18 had been mated to a black ram the previous winter and had produced a grey mouflon ram lamb. As both the ewe and the lamb were piebald the grey mouflon pattern was only found by close inspection. In order to test the hypothesis that the dam of the darkgrey ewe lamb born in 1960 at Skeidháholt was a heterozygous carrier of a gene for grey mouflon pattern she was rnated to a black ram without pattern the next year. Then she produced two grey mouflon progeny. Three other grey mouflon ewes in the Skeidháholt flock had been obtained from the same flock as the ewe described above. They all proved to be heterozygous carri- ers of a single gene for the grey mouflon pattern. Of the 19 remaining grey mouflon ewes in the foundation stock at Skeidháholt, 16
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