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Started by owlhoot, May 23, 2021, 02:51:16 PM
Quote from: Greg Massey on May 24, 2021, 10:17:15 AMThe short answer is jakes contribute very little to reproduction. It's obvious that jakes are not developed and are not fully capable of producing the level of sperm needed to fertilize clutches, but i will agree they do try to breed with hens. Research has shown that very small percentage of jakes are just capable of sufficient breeding during their first breeding season. You have to realize as the spring season is going on gobblers testosterone levels continues to grow and it makes sense that a jakes level of testosterone will decrease in that first years as the breeding season whines down. Same with gobblers, coming back together into a flock, it's all a breeding cycle.. IMO....
Quote from: Meleagris gallopavo on May 24, 2021, 11:41:36 PMWild turkeys reach sexual maturity in a year. I've read that a very low percentage of Jakes may actually breed by the end of the breeding season. I used to raise all the yard birds many years ago in the early 1990s and obtained some eastern wild turkey chicks/poults at a very young age that were hatched in the spring. They ended up being all hens. In the spring of the following year they certainly acted like they wanted to breed as they would lay down in front of the domestic jakes they were raised with but the jakes wouldn't breed them. We had wild turkeys in the woods around the house and I heard a gobbler a few times near the house. All 3 hens left soon after. A month or two later a hen would hang around the house with several poults and she wouldn't run when approached so we figured it was one I raised. I take this as an anecdotal, isolated case in unusual circumstances. So I'd say the hens "can" breed and have poults the first year, but I'd say this is the exception rather than the rule. According to the articles I've read the hens (most I believe) can and do breed once early and throughout breeding season and can lay a full clutch of fertile eggs from that first breeding. The sperm can stay viable to fertilize eggs for 8 weeks. They can be bred by other mature toms after they're first bred but it's probably unnecessary. Spring gobbler seasons start in each state after the breeding season has begun. This information I obtained from several Land Grant university Extension service websites. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: Howie g on May 24, 2021, 10:05:37 PMQuote from: guesswho on May 24, 2021, 03:11:22 PMJust a question because I have no idea. But if a Jake is not capable of breeding, then what about a Jenny? Is she able to breed successfully?The answer is yes ! Jenny and I have two children...
Quote from: guesswho on May 24, 2021, 03:11:22 PMJust a question because I have no idea. But if a Jake is not capable of breeding, then what about a Jenny? Is she able to breed successfully?
Quote from: Meleagris gallopavo on May 25, 2021, 08:26:18 PMAn oldie but goody.Lewis, John B., and Robert P. Breitenbach. "Breeding Potential of Subadult Wild Turkey Gobblers." The Journal of Wildlife Management, vol. 30, no. 3, 1966, pp. The take home message from the Missouri study indicated verbatim from the abstract "The sample taken from the testes of subadult gobblers shot during the 1964 and 1965 turkey seasons showed 28 percent (14 of 50) which possessed mature sperm. These data imply that these subadults could be capable of breeding." So just over 25% of jakes "could" breed, which doesn't necessarily mean they do. They just have to find the right hen I suppose.Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: guesswho on May 25, 2021, 08:13:29 PMQuote from: Howie g on May 24, 2021, 10:05:37 PMQuote from: guesswho on May 24, 2021, 03:11:22 PMJust a question because I have no idea. But if a Jake is not capable of breeding, then what about a Jenny? Is she able to breed successfully?The answer is yes ! Jenny and I have two children... Does Forrest know about this? No , he doesn't know . Please don't tell him ,,, lord knows I can't out run him
Quote from: Shiloh on May 23, 2021, 04:14:18 PMI have two chicks in a box in my garage that were fathered by a Jake. That's for certain.
Quote from: dublelung on May 27, 2021, 10:46:24 AMQuote from: Shiloh on May 23, 2021, 04:14:18 PMI have two chicks in a box in my garage that were fathered by a Jake. That's for certain. I've told them the same thing on here before but they don't want to hear it. My son's turkeys were all in a pen and there's no way anything other than the jake bred his hens. They both hatched and raised poults.