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Effective population size and inbreeding depression on litter size in rabbits. A case study
Author(s) -
Ragab M.,
Sánchez J.P.,
Baselga M.
Publication year - 2015
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 - 10.1111/jbg.12110
Subject(s) - inbreeding , inbreeding depression , litter , biology , selection (genetic algorithm) , effective population size , zoology , population , population size , weaning , veterinary medicine , demography , ecology , genetics , genetic variation , medicine , sociology , computer science , gene , artificial intelligence
Summary The purpose of this study is to use demographic and litter size data on four Spanish maternal lines of rabbits (A, V, H and LP ), as a case study, in order to: (i) estimate the effective population size of the lines, as a measure of the rate of increase of inbreeding, and (ii) study whether the inbreeding effect on litter size traits depends on the pattern of its accumulation over time. The lines are being selected for litter size at weaning and are kept closed at the same selection nucleus under the same selection and management programme. The study considered 47 794 l and a pedigree of 14 622 animals. Some practices in mating and selection management allow an increase of the inbreeding coefficient lower than 0.01 per generation in these lines of around 25 males and 125 females. Their effective population size (Ne) was around 57.3, showing that the effect of selection, increasing the inbreeding, was counterbalanced by the management practices, intended to reduce the rate of inbreeding increase. The inbreeding of each individual was broken down into three components: old, intermediate and new inbreeding. The coefficients of regression of the old, intermediate and new inbreeding on total born ( TB ), number born alive ( NBA ) and number weaned ( NW ) per litter showed a decreasing trend from positive to negative values. Regression coefficients significantly different from zero were those for the old inbreeding on TB (6.79 ± 2.37) and NBA (5.92 ± 2.37). The contrast between the coefficients of regression between the old and new inbreeding were significant for the three litter size traits: 7.57 ± 1.72 for TB ; 6.66 ± 1.73 for NBA and 5.13 ± 1.67 for NW . These results have been interpreted as the combined action of purging unfavourable genes and artificial selection favoured by the inbreeding throughout the generations of selection.