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Strategien zur Auswahl von Paarungen für die Ausnutzung von Dominanzvarianz zwischen und innerhalb Rassen
Author(s) -
Hayes B. J.,
Miller S. P.
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
journal of animal breeding and genetics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.689
H-Index - 51
eISSN - 1439-0388
pISSN - 0931-2668
DOI - 10.1046/j.1439-0388.2000.00252.x
Subject(s) - breed , biology , selection (genetic algorithm) , truncation selection , heterosis , dominance (genetics) , statistics , genetic variation , mathematics , ecology , genetics , agronomy , computer science , hybrid , artificial intelligence , gene
Summary In multi‐breed livestock populations, dominance variance is found both between and within breeds for many economically important traits. Mate selection strategies were developed to exploit both types of dominance variation simultaneously, with the aim of maximizing genetic merit of progeny. The extended super‐breed model, in which breeds are viewed as groups of related and inbred animals within a ‘super‐breed’, was used to predict individual additive and dominance effects for use in mate selection. Performance of mate selection was assessed under a range of relative values of additive and dominance variances for one generation of breeding. Mate selection on total progeny merit, including additive effects, individual dominance effects, and value of heterosis, was the optimal breeding strategy at all values of (co)variance components, with improvements in total progeny performance of up to 12.5 % over truncation selection followed by random mating when dominance variance was large relative to total genetic variance. Improvement in progeny merit from mate selection, relative to truncation selection, followed by random mating or truncation selection, followed by mate allocation, was particularly great (up to 53 %) when there was considerable heterosis. Improvements were small if dominance variance was small relative to total genetic variance, and heterosis was low. If the target population is large, full mate selection on total progeny merit is computationally demanding, and unlikely to be practical. Alternative, less computationally demanding strategies made nearly optimal selection and mating decisions at some parameter estimates. Integrating multi‐breed genetic evaluation, using a superbreed model, with mate selection provides a powerful framework for the design of breeding programmes which exploit available sources of genetic merit.

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