Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia

Background: The poultry industry in sub-Saharan Africa is a rapidly developing sector mostly based on smallholder farming. Increased demand for poultry-derived products, driven by the growing economy and population, has intensified importations of highly productive exotic breeds and crossbreeding wi...

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Main Authors: Banos, G., Girma, Mekonnen, Solomon, Bersabhe, Davoudi, P., Esatu, Wondmeneh, Dessie, Tadelle, Psifidi, A., Watson, K., Hanotte, Olivier H., Sánchez-Molano, E.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: BioMed Central 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174205
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author Banos, G.
Girma, Mekonnen
Solomon, Bersabhe
Davoudi, P.
Esatu, Wondmeneh
Dessie, Tadelle
Psifidi, A.
Watson, K.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Sánchez-Molano, E.
author_browse Banos, G.
Davoudi, P.
Dessie, Tadelle
Esatu, Wondmeneh
Girma, Mekonnen
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Psifidi, A.
Solomon, Bersabhe
Sánchez-Molano, E.
Watson, K.
author_facet Banos, G.
Girma, Mekonnen
Solomon, Bersabhe
Davoudi, P.
Esatu, Wondmeneh
Dessie, Tadelle
Psifidi, A.
Watson, K.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Sánchez-Molano, E.
author_sort Banos, G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Background: The poultry industry in sub-Saharan Africa is a rapidly developing sector mostly based on smallholder farming. Increased demand for poultry-derived products, driven by the growing economy and population, has intensified importations of highly productive exotic breeds and crossbreeding with local ecotypes. However, commercial chickens with exotic genes often struggle to adapt to the local climate under smallholder farmers management. Understanding the chicken response to weather changes is crucial for developing selection schemes that ensure proper adaptation. In the present study, we derived individual phenotypes for growth resilience of commercial free-ranging chickens to changing weather conditions in Ethiopia. In addition, we performed genomic association analyses to assess the genetic background of these phenotypes and identify potential candidate genes of interest. Results: Novel resilience phenotypes describing changes in chicken growth profiles in response to weather fluctuation were developed. Variations in daily air temperature, relative humidity and amount of precipitation had the strongest impact on growth. Significant genomic variance was detected for growth resilience to changes in air temperature measurements and a temperature-humidity index. Genomic markers correlated with these resilience traits were mostly located within or near candidate genes associated with lipid metabolism and adipocyte homeostasis. Some of these genes have been previously linked to animal responses to environmental stressors in other species. Conclusions: The phenotypes of growth resilience of chickens to changing weather conditions exhibited significant genomic variation. The outcomes of this study may facilitate the genomic selection of commercial chickens that are not only highly productive, but also capable of maintaining their production levels under varying weather conditions.
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spelling CGSpace1742052025-10-26T12:52:38Z Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia Banos, G. Girma, Mekonnen Solomon, Bersabhe Davoudi, P. Esatu, Wondmeneh Dessie, Tadelle Psifidi, A. Watson, K. Hanotte, Olivier H. Sánchez-Molano, E. chickens genomics poultry Background: The poultry industry in sub-Saharan Africa is a rapidly developing sector mostly based on smallholder farming. Increased demand for poultry-derived products, driven by the growing economy and population, has intensified importations of highly productive exotic breeds and crossbreeding with local ecotypes. However, commercial chickens with exotic genes often struggle to adapt to the local climate under smallholder farmers management. Understanding the chicken response to weather changes is crucial for developing selection schemes that ensure proper adaptation. In the present study, we derived individual phenotypes for growth resilience of commercial free-ranging chickens to changing weather conditions in Ethiopia. In addition, we performed genomic association analyses to assess the genetic background of these phenotypes and identify potential candidate genes of interest. Results: Novel resilience phenotypes describing changes in chicken growth profiles in response to weather fluctuation were developed. Variations in daily air temperature, relative humidity and amount of precipitation had the strongest impact on growth. Significant genomic variance was detected for growth resilience to changes in air temperature measurements and a temperature-humidity index. Genomic markers correlated with these resilience traits were mostly located within or near candidate genes associated with lipid metabolism and adipocyte homeostasis. Some of these genes have been previously linked to animal responses to environmental stressors in other species. Conclusions: The phenotypes of growth resilience of chickens to changing weather conditions exhibited significant genomic variation. The outcomes of this study may facilitate the genomic selection of commercial chickens that are not only highly productive, but also capable of maintaining their production levels under varying weather conditions. 2025-04-14 2025-04-15T16:46:38Z 2025-04-15T16:46:38Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174205 en Open Access BioMed Central Banos, G., Girma, M., Solomon, B., Davoudi, P., Esatu, W., Dessie, T., Psifidi, A., Watson, K., Hanotte, O. and Sánchez-Molano, E. 2025. Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia. BMC Genomics 26: 371.
spellingShingle chickens
genomics
poultry
Banos, G.
Girma, Mekonnen
Solomon, Bersabhe
Davoudi, P.
Esatu, Wondmeneh
Dessie, Tadelle
Psifidi, A.
Watson, K.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Sánchez-Molano, E.
Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia
title Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia
title_full Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia
title_short Growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free-ranging chickens in Ethiopia
title_sort growth resilience to weather variation in commercial free ranging chickens in ethiopia
topic chickens
genomics
poultry
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/174205
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