The study was conducted with the database obtained from the Breeding Program of Brown Egg Laying Hens of the Poultry Laboratory (LAVIC) of the Department of Animal Science of the Federal University of Santa Maria (UFSM), where it is used poultry breeds such as White Plymouth Rock (PRW), Barred Plymouth Rock (PRB) e Red Rhode Island (RIR). The data used referred to two generations of these three breeds during the first production cycle of 2009 and 2010. The parameters evaluated were: weekly rate of egg laying, egg weight and body weight. The research was divided into two approaches of analysis, the first being performed with the production data, aiming to identify critical points of phenotypic selections related to zootechnical characterization, and the second approach consisted in the association of the same production parameters together with the weather data of Santa Maria - RS. The data was analyzed using the Data Mining technique, using the classification task by building the decision tree with the J48 algorithm. The data mining indicated the average rate of egg laying at 25 weeks of age and the average weight of eggs at 33 weeks of age, and pointed these as the main variables related to the differentiation of breeds studied, (accuracy of 83.3%). On the second approach, the decision trees obtained showed accuracy between 88% and 91%, suggesting a strong association between the environmental variables and the production performance of the birds. The PRW breed is more sensitive to heat than the RIR and the PRB breed and they showed a higher rate of production during the pre-peak phase. The data mining allowed to classify the productivity of the brown egg laying hens, which may indicate environmental influences on the phenotype of the different breeds studied.
bioclimatology; brown eggs; animal breeding; environment