The most basic way is to rank the animals according to their phenotype and select the best ones for breeding. This method is also called Mass Selection, or Selection on Own Performance. For example, of you want to breed large rabbits, then you rank the animals according to size and only use the largest as parents for the next generation. Will that be a successful method? The answer to that will depend on a number of things. You want to know whether these largest animals indeed were the ones with the best genetic potential. Why were the others smaller? Were they not fed properly when they were young? Or did they have the wrong genes? An answer to these questions lies in the heritability. After all, that is an indication of how much of the variation in phenotypes you observe are caused by genetic variation among the animals. A high heritability indicates that the small rabbits most likely are small because they have lower genetic potential for growth than the larger rabbits. The better the phenotype provides a representation of the genotype, the better you are able to identify the genetically best animals, and thus the better the results of mass selection will be. In addition, an important prerequisite is that own performances are available.
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