Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1970, Side 110

Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1970, Side 110
108 ÍSLENZKAR LANDBUNAÐARRANNSÓKNIR 0 per cent and for the badgerface lambs 84 and 47 per cent white fibres. Tbe mouflon pattern thus shows far greater variation than found by Roberts and White (1930 a, 1930 b) who regarded their reversed badgerface (Berge’s mouflon) to show remarkably little variation com- pared with the badgerface. Roberts ancl White also stress that on parting the fleece of the reversed badgerface animals on the dorsal side, the base of the staple showed the same colouration as found in ordinary black or brown sheep. The mouflon animal (Berge, 1964 a) with the highest percentage of white fibres on the back far exceeds the highest percent- age of wliite founcl in the grey animals, but is comparable to the highest number of white fibres obtained fronr badgerface. These figures and the use of the belly colour as one of the main criteria in the classification of the two patterns, indicates that badgerface-mouflon animals occurring in Berge’s (1964 a) study might have been classified as mouflons, particularly if they were of the darker type. Berge (1964 a) concludes that mouflon is dominant to badgerface and that the two possibly are alleles, as mouflon X rnouflon have not given any badgerface, and badger- face X badgerface never have given any mouflon. The general conclusion reached by Brooker and Dolling (1969 a), in their studies on inheritance of patterns in non- white Merinos, was tliat the genes for white, badgerface, mouflon (reversed badgerface) and selfcolour were allelic and in decreas- ind order of dominance. The dominance of badgerface over mouflon and selfcolour, and of mouflon over selfcolour, however, was not always found to be complete. This lack of clearcut dominance rela- tionship is in contradiction to the results of the present study. The high incidence of unclassified ani- mals in their study (19 unclassified vs. 141 classified in inter se matings of nonwhite parents) renders a discussion of the reasons for the discrepancy of doubtful value. The difference between earlier results and the results in the present study with respect to the dominance relationship be- tween the badgerface and mouflon patterns can to a large extent have been due to the lack of recognition of the badgerface-mou- flon phenotype. 2. Grey. The inheritance of grey colour in non- white sheep where the nonwhite condition is recessive (or hypostatic) to white has been studied by Dry (1926, 1927), Vasin (1928), Zóphóníasson (1934), Löfvenberg and Johansson (1952), Morais et. al. (1953), Berge (1958, 1964 a) and Skárman (1961, 1963 a, b). There is considerable disagreement be- tween these authors as to the inheritance of grey. Dry concluded that white, grey and black formed an epistatic series. His conclusion regarding the relation between grey ancl white is based on the occurrence of some grey progeny (exact numbers not stated) from a white ram and black ewes, and several black lambs from tliis same white ram and black ewes. Vasin concludes that the gene for grey (wr) seems to have an intermediate mode of inheritance, predominantly recessive. His data on its inheritance are very limited. Zóphóníasson found that grey usually was dominant to absence of grey in nonwhite sheep, but he also observed several grey progeny out of black X black and black X brown matings. Löfvenberg and Johansson also found that grey usually behaved as if it were epi- static to black, but they also found several exceptions from that rule and concluded
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