Literature DB >> 22444927

Mating animals by minimising the covariance between ancestral contributions generates less inbreeding without compromising genetic gain in breeding schemes with truncation selection.

M Henryon1, A C Sørensen, P Berg.   

Abstract

We reasoned that mating animals by minimising the covariance between ancestral contributions (MCAC mating) will generate less inbreeding and at least as much genetic gain as minimum-coancestry mating in breeding schemes where the animals are truncation-selected. We tested this hypothesis by stochastic simulation and compared the mating criteria in hierarchical and factorial breeding schemes, where the animals were selected based on breeding values predicted by animal-model BLUP. Random mating was included as a reference-mating criterion. We found that MCAC mating generated 4% to 8% less inbreeding than minimum-coancestry mating in the hierarchical and factorial breeding schemes without any loss in genetic gain. Moreover, it generated upto 28% less inbreeding and about 3% more genetic gain than random mating. The benefits of MCAC mating over minimum-coancestry mating are worthwhile because they can be achieved without extra costs or practical constraints. MCAC mating merely uses pedigree information to pair the animals more appropriately and is clearly a worthy alternative to minimum-coancestry mating and probably any other mating criterion. We believe, therefore, that MCAC mating should be used in breeding schemes where pedigree information is available.

Entities:  

Year:  2009        PMID: 22444927     DOI: 10.1017/S1751731109004807

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Animal        ISSN: 1751-7311            Impact factor:   3.240


  2 in total

1.  Effect of non-random mating on genomic and BLUP selection schemes.

Authors:  Kahsay G Nirea; Anna K Sonesson; John A Woolliams; Theo H E Meuwissen
Journal:  Genet Sel Evol       Date:  2012-04-11       Impact factor: 4.297

2.  Mating strategies with genomic information reduce rates of inbreeding in animal breeding schemes without compromising genetic gain.

Authors:  H Liu; M Henryon; A C Sørensen
Journal:  Animal       Date:  2016-08-17       Impact factor: 3.240

  2 in total

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