Article (Scientific journals)
Influence of dominance relationships on the estimation of dominance variance with sire-dam subclass effects
Gengler, Nicolas; VanVleck, L. D.; MacNeil, M. D. et al.
1997In Journal of Animal Science, 75 (11), p. 2885-2891
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Keywords :
hereford; dominance; growth; genetic parameters
Abstract :
[en] Two data sets from the USDA Livestock and Range Research Laboratory mere analyzed to study dominance variance and the influence of dominance relationships. The first consisted of 4,155 birth weight (3,884 weaning weight) records of inbred USDA Line 1 Herefords. The second consisted of 8,065 birth weight (7,380 weaning weight) records from a line-cross experiment with five lines. Two models were used. Both included fixed effects of year-sex of calf and age of dam, and covariates for calving date, inbreeding of animal, and inbreeding of dam. For the second set, additional covariates were line composition and heterozygosity coefficients. Random effects were direct and maternal additive genetic, maternal permanent environment, sire-dam subclass, and residual. Model 1 considered sire-dam subclasses unrelated. Model 2 related sire-dam subclasses with a parental dominance relationship matrix. Variance components were estimated using REML. Differences between estimates with Model 1 and 2 were unimportant except for dominance variance. For the first data set, estimates with Model 2 of relative genetic direct and maternal variances, direct-maternal correlation, permanent environment, and dominance variances for birth weight were .35, .13, -.02, .03, and .25, respectively, and they were .39, .11, .04, .06 and .14 for the second data set. For weaning weight, the first data set estimates were .20, .15, -.37, .19, and .11, respectively, and they were .16, .20, -.07, .18, and .18 for the second data set. Changes, decreases and increases, in estimates of dominance variances may be due to increased information from relationships and family types other than full-sibs. The assumption of unrelated sire-dam subclasses might not be appropriate for estimation of dominance variance in populations with many dominance relationships among siredam classes.
Disciplines :
Genetics & genetic processes
Animal production & animal husbandry
Author, co-author :
Gengler, Nicolas  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech > Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech
VanVleck, L. D.
MacNeil, M. D.
Misztal, I.
Pariacote, F. A.
Language :
English
Title :
Influence of dominance relationships on the estimation of dominance variance with sire-dam subclass effects
Publication date :
November 1997
Journal title :
Journal of Animal Science
ISSN :
0021-8812
eISSN :
1525-3163
Publisher :
American Society of Animal Science, Savoy, United States - Illinois
Volume :
75
Issue :
11
Pages :
2885-2891
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBi :
since 17 September 2009

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