Aims were to estimate the extent of genetic
heterogeneity in environmental variance. Data comprised 99 535 records of
35-day body weights from broiler chickens reared in a controlled
environment. Residual variance within dam families was estimated using
ASREML, after fitting fixed effects such as genetic groups and hatches, for
each of 377 genetically contemporary sires with a large number of progeny
(>100 males or females each). Residual variance was computed separately
for male and female offspring, and after correction for sampling, strong
evidence for heterogeneity was found, the standard deviation between sires
in within variance amounting to 15–18% of its mean. Reanalysis using
log-transformed data gave similar results, and elimination of 2–3% of
outlier data reduced the heterogeneity but it was still over 10%. The
correlation between estimates for males and females was low, however. The
correlation between sire effects on progeny mean and residual variance for
body weight was small and negative (-0.1). Using a data set bigger than any
yet presented and on a trait measurable in both sexes, this study has shown
evidence for heterogeneity in the residual variance, which could not be
explained by segregation of major genes unless very few determined the
trait