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Showing 2 results for Animal Model

M. Sargolzaei, M. A. Edriss,
Volume 8, Issue 1 (4-2004)
Abstract

In this study, 14322 growth trait records of 2387 sheep bred and reared in the Rearing and Breeding Station of Bakhtiari Sheep during 1989-1997 were used to estimate the phenotypic, genetic, and environmental trends for some of the growth traits using Animal Model for lambs, rams, and ewes. The genetic trend of birth weight, weaning weight, six month's weight, daily gain from birth to weaning, daily gain from weaning to six month and daily gain from birth to six month were 12.2 (+2.9), 19.6 (+5.5), 28.7 (+8.7), .15(+0.04), 0.06 (+0.05) and 0.014 (+0.04) gr. for ewes as an indicator of genetic level of the herd respectively. Also, average of the genetic change rate per year for rams and lambs were calculated. Overall, the maximum progress rate was for six-month body weight (28.7 gr. per year) and the next was weaning weight (19.6 gr. per year). The results for lambs and rams also showed that these traits had the same rank for the genetic progress. The progress could be due to direct selection for these traits in the selection index criterion although there were negative phenotypic and environmental trends during the study years. Negative phenotypic and environmental trends could be due to bad environmental conditions, especially to nutrition of the sheep in an unsuitable (drought) climate during the study years. .
M. R. Bahreini Behzadi, F. Eftekhari Shahroudi, L. D. van Vleck,
Volume 9, Issue 1 (4-2005)
Abstract

Data from the birth weight (BW), the average daily gain from birth to weaning (ADG) and the weaning weight (WW) of 1182, 1099 and 1099 lambs were respectively collected and applied to estimate the maternal effects on heritabilities as well as on the determination of the environmental factors. The data were collected from Shahrbabak Sheep Breeding Research Station within five year, from 1993 to 1998. The effects of the year of birth, the age of the dam and its sex on all the traits were significant. The type of birth had no effect on BW but it was significant for the other two traits. Estimates of (co)variance components and genetic parameters were obtained by restricted maximum likelihood, using single and two-trait animal models. Based on the most appropriate fitted model, direct heritability of BW, ADG and WW were estimated at 0.10± 0.06, 0.21 ±0.08 and 0.22± 0.09, respectively. The maternal heritability for the three traits was also estimated at 0.27± 0.04, 0.15 ±0.05 and 0.19 ±0.05, respectively. Direct genetic and phenotypic correlations between BW and ADG BW and WW ADG and WW were estimated at 0.85 and 0.41 0.82 and 0.48 and 0.99 and 0.99, respectively. Ignoring maternal effects in animal model caused overestimation of direct heritability. Thus maternal effects are significant sources of variation for early growth traits and their ignorance in the animal model causes inaccurate genetic evaluation of the lambs.

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