We have studied the association of the ten possible B blood-group genotypes with mortality during incubation in the 1966 generation of two relatively noninbred populations of Light Sussex chickens. These were related substrains 6D and 6F derived in the 1964 generation by equal division of strain 6, which we had previously studied in its 1962 generation. The B blood-group genotypes of zygotes but not of dams were associated with marked mortality differences in 6F, while in 6D almost no differences were found. Comparisons of the findings in 6D and 6F with the results previously published for the ancestor strain 6, after adjustment for overall between-population differences, showed marked changes between 6 and 6F in the mortalities associated with the five most frequent genotypes. In four of these, the mortalities in 6D were about half way between those in 6 and 6F. Taken together, these results provide evidence that the selective pressures on the B locus from differential embryonic mortality vary from generation to generation and even between populations differing apparently only slightly in environment and genetic composition.
In progeny of crosses between females from 6D and 6F with males from 5D and 5F respectively, the latter being two related Rhode Island Red/New Hampshire substrains, embryonic mortality was much lower than in the pure matings within 6D and 6F, and only a few associations with B blood-group genotypes of zygotes were found.
The results are discussed in relation to the general lack of association of polyallelic polymorphisms with aspects of fitness reported by other workers; and the importance is stressed of studying associations of genotypes rather than genes or serological factors.