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Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) •Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves mating systems (combining sires and dams to maximize efficiency)
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Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Dec 26, 2015

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Meryl Parsons
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Page 1: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9)

• Genetic improvement of farm animals

–Involves selection (choosing the best to be

parents)

–Involves mating systems (combining sires and

dams to maximize efficiency)

Page 2: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Quantitative Inheritance

• Quantitative traits – traits that can be measured

–Have continuous variation – any two values could have an intermediate value

–Generally controlled by many gene pairs• Qualitative traits – traits that can be classified

–Frequently controlled by few gene pairs

Page 3: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Phenotypic Variation in Quantitative Traits

• Distribution of performance traits generally normal (bell curve)

• Majority of values near the mean

• Fewer values far away from the mean

Page 4: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Frequency of Genes in a Population

• Goal of genetic improvement

–Increase frequency of desirable alleles (form of a gene)

–Decrease frequency of undesirable alleles

Page 5: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Frequency of Genes in a Population

Total

Number Genotype Red White

49 red RR 98 0

42 roan RW 42 42

9 white WW 0 18

Total 140 60

Freq R = 140/200 = .7 Freq W = 60/200 = .3

Page 6: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Forces that Change Gene Frequency

• Mutation

• Migration

• Selection

• Genetic drift

Page 7: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mutation

• Change in the base sequence

• Some mutations occur at regular frequency

• Mutation rate is low and regular change due to

mutations is very small

• By chance, some mutations end up making a

difference in livestock (dwarfism in beef cattle

in the 1950s)

Page 8: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Migration

• Importing new genes into a population–Purchasing new sire–Opening up breed to new animals–Importing European breeds of cattle

• Very powerful force for changing gene frequency

Page 9: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Selection

• Choosing best young animals to be parents

• Eliminating inferior parents from population

• Progress is gradual but steady

• Should select on a balance of characteristics

Page 10: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Genetic Drift

• Change in gene frequency due to chance

• Each sperm and egg contains random sample

of genes from parent

• Sample may be above or below average

• Some offspring better than average of parents

• Some offspring worse than average of parents

Page 11: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Phenotypic Variation

• Phenotype = Genotype + Environment

• Variance in phenotypes

–Due to variance in genotypes and environments

• Environmental effects

–Effects other than genetic effects

Page 12: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Genotype x Environment Interaction

• Differences between genotypes may not be constant in all environments

• Example–Brahman crosses superior to British crosses in southern states

–British crosses superior to Brahman crosses in northern states

Page 13: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Heritability

• Proportion of phenotypic variation that is due to genetic variation

• Describes how easy to make progress through selection

• May be any value from 0 to 1

• Usually between 0 and .60

Page 14: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Heritability

• Generally:

• Reproductive traits – low heritability (0-.2)

• Growth traits – moderate heritability (.2-.4)

• Carcass traits – high heritability (.4-.6)

• There are some exceptions to these generalizations

Page 15: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Selection with Different Types of Gene Action

• Effectiveness depends on whether gene action is additive or non-additive

• Additive–Easy to make selection improvement–Each gene has differential effect

Page 16: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Selection with Different Types of Gene Action

• Non- additive (dominance or epistasis)–Some alleles may mask other alleles

–Some gene pairs may affect other gene pairs

–Reduces effectiveness of selection

–Selection may move toward some intermediate gene frequencies instead of 0 or 1

Page 17: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Progeny Testing for Recessive Alleles

• Important to identify carriers

• Mate suspected carrier to known carriers or to daughters

• If enough matings without affected offspring:–Can establish low probability that individual is a carrier

Page 18: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Gene Action with Heritability, Inbreeding and Heterosis

• Additive effects large–Heritability high, effect of inbreeding and heterosis low

• Non-additive effects large–Heritability low, effect in inbreeding and heterosis high

Page 19: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Selection of Superior Breeding Stock

• Selection on individual performance–If available – individual performance is single most important piece of information

–Selection on individual performance most effective for traits with moderate to high heritability

Page 20: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Selection of Superior Breeding Stock

• Selection on performance of relatives–Sibs, progeny, pedigree, other collateral relatives

–Useful especially for traits with low heritability

–Some traits not measured on potential parent•carcass traits•traits measured in only one sex (eg milk)

Page 21: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Predicting Selection Response

• One generation of selection–Response = heritability x selection differential

–Selection differential = difference between those selected to be parents and average of group

–Selection differential larger for males• smaller proportion of young males need to be kept

Page 22: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Predicting Selection Response

• For several years–Yearly selection response= heritability x selection differential

generation interval

–Generation interval•average length of time to replace parents•swine 2-3 years, cattle 4-6 years

Page 23: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Genetic Correlation

• Selection for one trait causes genetic change in another trait

• Caused by pleiotropy (genes that affect more than one trait)

Page 24: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

National Performance Programs

• Was need for uniform performance information

• Dairy programs organized first

• Beef programs followed

• Swine and sheep programs came later

Page 25: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Dairy Cattle Performance Programs

• Dairy Herd Improvement Association

• Cooperative with United States Department of Agriculture

• Standardized lactation length for measuring milk production at 305 days

• Huge genetic increase in milk production in last 50 years

Page 26: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Beef Cattle Performance Programs

• Beef Improvement Federation

• “Guidelines for Uniform Beef Improvement Programs”

• Established standard recommendations for measuring growth, efficiency, reproduction, carcass traits

Page 27: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Swine Performance Programs

• National Swine Improvement Federation

• “Guidelines for Uniform Swine Improvement Programs”

• Established standard recommendations for measuring growth, efficiency, reproduction, carcass traits

• Recommends indexes to use for selection

Page 28: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Sheep Performance Programs

• National Sheep Improvement Program

• Established standard recommendations for measuring growth, efficiency, reproduction, carcass traits

• Although slower to develop than other classes of livestock, programs are well organized

Page 29: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

National Genetic Evaluation

• Problem – how to make fair comparisons between potential breeding stock raised in different environments?

• Solution – use ties between herds that are established because many sires are used across several herds due to artificial insemination

Page 30: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

National Genetic Evaluation

• Breed associations maintain large databases of performance records for their herd improvement programs

• Data used to compare genetic merit of animals across entire breeds

Page 31: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

National Genetic Evaluation

• Expected Progeny Difference (EPD)–Measure of predicted genetic merit

–Used for comparison between animalsBull Weaning Weight EPD

A +40B +10

–Means that Bull A is expected to sire calves that weigh 30 pounds more than the calves from Sire B

Page 32: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

National Genetic Evaluation

• Expected Progeny Difference (EPD)–EPD is called the PTA for dairy cattle (Predicted Transmitting Ability)

• Dairy – conducted by USDA

• Beef – conducted by breed associations

• Swine – organized within STAGES program (Swine Testing and Genetic Evaluation System) directed by Purdue University

Page 33: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mating Systems

• Inbreeding

• Linebreeding

• Linecrossing

• Crossbreeding

Page 34: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mating Systems

• Inbreeding–Mating of related individuals

–Increases homozygocity

–Does not cause mutations

–Does increase homozygous recessive frequency so increases frequency that mutant genes are expressed

Page 35: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mating Systems

• Inbreeding–Inbreeding depression

• recessive alleles tend to be inferior

• causes decline in performance due to increase in frequency of recessive homozygotes

• most decline in reproduction and livability

Page 36: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mating Systems

• Linebreeding–Mating system that causes large relationship to one outstanding ancestor while keeping inbreeding low

–Useful to retain genes of outstanding individual who is not longer available for breeding purposes

–Outstanding individual must appear in pedigree several times at least 3-4 generations back

Page 37: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mating Systems

• Linecrossing–Mating unrelated individuals within a breed

–Causes some increase in performance (less than what is seen with crossbreeding)

Page 38: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mating Systems

• Crossbreeding–Mating of individuals from different breeds

–Benefits• heterosis – advantage of crossbred individual compared

to the average of the component purebreds

• breed complementarity – using benefits from breeds while hiding the flaws

Page 39: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mating Systems

• Heterosis–Individual heterosis – advantage of crossbred offspring

–Maternal heterosis – advantage of crossbred mother

–Paternal heterosis – advantage of crossbred sire

Page 40: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Mating Systems

• Heterosis–Opposite of inbreeding depression

–Results from increase in heterozygocity

–Reproduction – large advantage from heterosis

–Growth – moderate advantage from heterosis

–Carcass – little advantage from heterosis

Page 41: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Crossbreeding Systems

• Terminal–Specific breed(s) of sire mated to specific breed(s) of dam

• Rotational–Breeds used in a regular cycle, daughters of one breed of sire mated to next breed of sire

Page 42: Principles of Selecting and Mating Farm Animals (Chapter 9) Genetic improvement of farm animals –Involves selection (choosing the best to be parents) –Involves.

Crossbreeding Systems• Terminal

–Uses maximum breed complementarity

–Uses maximum heterosis

–Must bring in replacement breeding stock

• Rotational–Replacement females retained by system

–No breed complementarity

–Some loss of heterosis