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Journal of Animal Science

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Genetic parameters for androstenone, skatole, indole, and human nose scores as measures of boar taint and their relationship with finishing traits

The purpose of this study was to evaluate measures of boar (Sus scrofa) taint as potential selection criteria to reduce boar taint so that castration of piglets will become unnecessary. Therefore, genetic parameters of boar taint measures and their genetic correlations with finishing traits were estimated. In particular, the usefulness of a human panel assessing boar taint (human nose score) was compared with chemical assessment of boar taint compounds, androstenone, skatole, and indole. Heritability estimates for androstenone, skatole, and indole were 0.54, 0.41, and 0.33, respectively. The heritability for the human nose score using multiple panelists was 0.12, and ranged from 0.12 to 0.19 for individual panelists. Genetic correlations between scores of panelists were generally high up to unity. The genetic correlations between human nose scores and the boar taint compounds ranged from 0.64 to 0.999. The boar taint compounds and human nose scores had low or favorable genetic correlations with finishing traits. Selection index estimates indicated that the effectiveness of a breeding program based on human nose scores can be comparable to a breeding program based on the boar taint compounds themselves. Human nose scores can thus be used as a cheap and fast alternative for the costly determination of boar taint compounds, needed in breeding pigs without boar taint.

Journal of Animal Science

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Genetic parameters for racing records in trotters using linear and generalized linear models

Heritability and repeatability and genetic and phenotypic correlations were estimated for trotting race records with linear and generalized linear models using 510,519 records on 17,792 Finnhorses and 513,161 records on 25,536 Standardbred trotters. Heritability and repeatability were estimated for single racing time and earnings traits with linear models, and logarithmic scale was used for racing time and fourth-root scale for earnings to correct for nonnormality. Generalized linear models with a gamma distribution were applied for single racing time and with a multinomial distribution for single earnings traits. In addition, genetic parameters for annual earnings were estimated with linear models on the observed and fourth-root scales.

Journal of Animal Science

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Direct and associative effects for androstenone and genetic correlations with backfat and growth in entire male pigs

In the pig industry, male piglets are surgically castrated early in life to prevent boar taint. Boar taint is mainly caused by androstenone and skatole. Androstenone is a pheromone that can be released from the salivary glands when the boar is sexually aroused. Boars are housed in groups and as a consequence boars can influence and be influenced by the phenotype of other boars by (non-)heritable social interactions. The influence of these social interactions on androstenone is not well understood. The objective of this study is to investigate whether androstenone concentrations are affected by (non-)heritable social interactions and estimate their genetic correlation with growth rate and backfat. The dataset contained 6,245 boars, of which 4,455 had androstenone observations (68%).

Journal of Animal Science

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Genomic-polygenic evaluation of Angus-Brahman multibreed cattle for feed efficiency and postweaning growth using the Illumina 3K chip

The objectives of this study were to determine the fraction of additive genetic variance explained by the SNP from the Illumina Bovine3K chip; to compare the ranking of animals evaluated with genomic-polygenic, genomic, and polygenic models; and to assess trends in predicted values from these 3 models for residual feed intake (RFI), daily feed intake (DFI), feed conversion ratio (FCR), and postweaning BW gain (PWG) in a multibreed Angus-Brahman cattle population under subtropical conditions. Data consisted of phenotypes and genotypes from 620 bulls, steers, and heifers ranging from 100% Angus to 100% Brahman. Phenotypes were collected in a GrowSafe automated feeding facility (GrowSafe Systems, Ltd., Airdrie, Alberta, Canada) from 2006 to 2010.

Journal of Animal Science

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Production and processing studies on calpain-system gene markers for beef tenderness: Consumer assessments of eating quality

We investigated the effects of calpain-system genetic markers on consumer beef quality ratings, including interactions of marker effects with hormonal growth promotant (HGP) use and tenderstretch hanging. Brahman cattle in New South Wales (NSW; n = 164) and Western Australia (WA; n = 141) were selected at weaning from commercial and research herds to achieve balance and divergence in calpastatin (CAST) and calpain 3 (CAPN3) gene marker status. Genotypes for μ-calpain (CAPN1–4751 and CAPN1–316) were also determined. Angus cattle (49 in NSW, 17 in WA) with favorable CAST and CAPN3 alleles, balanced for CAPN1-316 status, were also studied. Half the cattle at each site had HGP (Revalor–H, containing 200 mg trenbolone acetate and 20 mg 17β–estradiol) implants during grain finishing.

Field Crops

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Factors responsible for yield improvement in new Gossypium hirsutum L. cotton cultivars

The factors responsible for yield progress can be analysed through yield determinant frameworks. These conceptual models consider factors such as crop growth dynamics, partitioning of vegetative and reproductive biomass and yield components to provide insights into the factors responsible for observed genetic gains and opportunities for future gains. The aim of this study was to use direct cultivar comparison to assess the rate of genetic gain in the CSIRO (Australia) cotton breeding program, and to understand how factors within a conceptual yield determinant framework relate to yield performance. Using field experimentation, yield progress of 16.1 kg lint ha−1 y−1 was observed in ten cultivars released between 1968 and 2012. This study identified that selection pressure has resulted in improvements in total dry matter (TDM), harvest index (HI), lint percentage and carbon assimilation. While gains have been made in these four parameters, improvements in lint yield have largely been driven by altering HI through increasing lint percentage. Although improvements have been made in TDM, the reproductive allocation of total biomass and the amount and efficiency of light capture has not been altered in modern cultivars. Future gains in lint yield will require the concurrent maintenance of harvest index while producing larger plants with more fruiting branches that capture more incident radiation with increased efficiency. As the collection of phenotype data such as biomass, boll number, boll size and radiation use efficiency at the scale required in a commercial breeding program is largely aspirational, we conclude in the short term improvements may be achieved through direct selection for yield. Future efforts should be placed in increasing early season growth rates, and in the longer term enhancing carbon assimilation rates. Importantly, due to trait associations and the effects of trade-offs between functional components, factors within a conceptual framework must not be considered in isolation.