something to consider is that the female decides how many babies by the number of eggs produced in a cycle. More viable eggs = more eggs available to be fertilized. Low birth rates due to the male animal is usually quite abrupt but much easier to spot when breeding in defined groups or tracking when sows birth. Low birth rates due to the male would be low sperm production or malformed sperm, which is heritable. A male with malformed sperm has something going on in the production and formation of the sperm. If he managed to get any live offspring they too will produce poorly or not at all. I recently learned about this in sheep where someone bought a super amazing show ram and got 3 lambs from him over many years and many many ewes. Even then the offspring never produced at all and when the offspring ram was tested his malformed sperm was just like the sire's.
This also goes for females though. Females producing low numbers of eggs will produce daughters with low egg production. This is a long term breeding goal though. In goats number born is only 15% heritable, birth weight is 30-40%, mature weight 65%.
In sheep number born 10% heritable, birth weight 15%, mature weight 50%.
I would suspect the rabbits and GP are not terribly far off. I would definitely operate under the assumption that years of pet and show breeders selecting for small number litters, and often larger birth weight, intentionally or not this is the result. Heck even within NZ rabbits which are a meat breed a lot of breeders will go for smaller litters. While in rabbits there doesn't seem to be much difference in birth weight, excepting the odd huge single, at least in my experience, with GP being geared to fill up the available uterus space with babies ready to hit the ground running... We end up with large pups and birthing issues.
I didn't think about this when I still had my GPs but starting over I would definitely breed for larger litters and the smaller birth weights.
However it's a careful line. In sheep birth weight is a big topic because small lambs are significantly more prone to dying in the first week of life. Once you get to the 'decent sized' lambs, about 8lbs, the lambs do fine. And as birth weight gets higher the mortality rate doesn't really take a hit until the huge 13+lb lambs. But going smaller than 8lbs and the lambs mortality rate is crazy.
Being contained and small as they are I think 'too small' babies won't be as big a problem as sheep. Plenty of people pasture lamb in low temps which won't be an issue for GPs, stuff like that.
__________ Thu Jan 03, 2019 2:43 am __________
The simplest way to see who is producing and who is not.. I think I would keep a notebook in/near the GP area. Prepare a smaller area you can put really heavily preggo sows. When the colony has sows looking bred make note (black American sow 1/3/19 bred?) something like that. Maybe get a livestock breeding crayon to temporarily mark the ones looking bred, to easier spot and note if they get real big or not.
The big preggo sows can go into the maternity ward smaller pen. Then you can easily see who popped and has babies following.
If a marking crayon would work (or you go into ear tags) you can mark or tag the ones from bigger litters. IE, the singles, twins from the maternity pen don't get tagged.. the 4+ litters get tagged and that sow gets tagged. Now when returned to the colony at large you can see the tagged ear GP should not be pulled for feeding/culling etc. The young ones without tags can be pulled. Thus you select for larger litters.
If it were me and I really wanted to make sure I'm going to be able to continue I would actually start another colony or divide off a small second colony. In the new one would go sows that litter 4+. (If I am getting mostly singles and twins I'd even start with keeping the sows and offspring that have triplets and go from there.) I would tag the boars from these litters and when of-age weaned to the main colony. As the 'littering sows' are sorted they will get put in the main colony for periods of time to get bred back.
After some time with the secondary colony growing (and pups grown into breeding age young sows).. I would go to the main colony and choose some of the best looking ear tagged boars. The more the better to combat inbreeding %. (inbreeding also being a factor to fertility issues) Say I got up to 25 or 30 sows I'd want to chose about 8 of the very best of the tagged boars. And hopefully the sows and daughters not being all sired by the same one or two boars, then we can increase the variety of genetics. Also by this time assuming I've built up a good number of ear tagged boars in the main colony I would probably cull all non-tagged boars. This way I can increase production in the main colony by selecting boars but not culling all of the genetics from the whole rest of the colony. As the main colony production goes up I can add 4+ litter sows into the second colony. Thus keeping genetics from becoming bottlenecked.
Eventually the first colony will be smaller in number. And I hypothesize it would become obviously not as productive as the second colony. I would then just cull the remaining of the 'first' colony. From here I could select more from within the colony or begin again by separating out sows who produce 5+ or 6+ etc. <br /><br /> __________ Thu Jan 03, 2019 2:50 am __________ <br /><br /> I've attached a graph I saved from a very long detailed break down about inbreeding percentages and calculating for wild flocks or things like fish breeding where you don't have "male A breeds females 1-15" but a huge tank with appx 200 female fish and appx 50 male fish. And multi sire breeding in sheep/cows.
I know this is getting real long now :roll: but I've been watching tons of webinars about breeding systems and haven't thought about the GPs in ages.. Now my wheels are all a'turnin'! :mrgreen: that's what ya get pokin' the bear :roll: :lol: