Thirty-seven layer performance tests have been conducted at North Carolina State
University during the past 53 years. Originally established as the North
Carolina Random Sample Layer Test (NCRSLT), all of the test flocks have been
hatched and housed at the Poultry Unit of the North Carolina Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Service's Piedmont Research Station at Salisbury, North
Carolina. In 1988, the NCRSLT name was changed to the North Carolina Layer
Performance and Management Test (NCLP&MT) reflecting changes in the
testing procedures to include the evaluation of management practices used by
commercial egg producers. Strain testing and evaluating the relative egg
production of commercially available egg production stocks began in 1911, and
the number of such Random Sample Tests in North America peaked at 23 in
approximately 1968. The mission for the NCRSLT to provide an unbiased evaluation
of the overall performance of strains, evolved to include the effects of various
housing and husbandry practices on the performance of the genetic stocks entered
into the test. Test results have been distributed to the industry throughout the
USA as well as to producers in 22 other countries throughout the world. In
addition, the internet site for the NCLP&MT http://poultry.ces.ncsu.edu/layer-performance/ allows the
distribution of the results to many other interested university and government
officials. This review of the first 37 North Carolina layer tests shows
continuing improvements in egg production, reduction in body weight and feed
consumption, increases in egg weight and feed conversion, improvements in
liveability, and an improvement in egg quality from the commercially available
white and brown egg strains. These changes have continued throughout the 50+
year history of the tests, and the changes observed have been brought about
primarily by poultry breeding companies applying quantitative genetics for the
improvement of the layer stocks used worldwide.