| Literature DB >> 30114191 |
Luiza Rodrigues Alves Abreu1, Virgínia Mara Pereira Ribeiro1, Gabriela Canabrava Gouveia1, Eduardo Penteado Cardoso2, Fabio Luiz Buranelo Toral1.
Abstract
The knowledge of genetic trends and trade-offs between growth and reproductive traits might be useful to understand the evolution of these traits in livestock and natural populations of animals. We estimated the genetic trends and trade-offs between pre-weaning growth and calving intervals of Nellore animals from a commercial farm. Two-trait animal models were used to estimate covariance components and breeding values (EBV) for direct and maternal genetic effects of pre-weaning growth and direct genetic effects of calving intervals. Regression analyses were performed to examine the relationship between direct and maternal EBV of pre-weaning growth and direct EBV of calving intervals (dependent variables) and the coefficient of generation of each animal (independent variable). We also performed regression analyses to examine the relationship between direct EBV of calving intervals (dependent variables) and direct and maternal EBV of pre-weaning growth (independent variables). The genetic trends for direct and maternal genetic effect for pre-weaning growth were significant and presented genetic evolution in the studied Nellore herd. The genetic trends for the reproductive traits were also significant but indicated genetic changes in an unfavorable way. The genetic correlations between direct effects of pre-weaning growth and calving intervals traits and the genetic correlations between maternal effects of pre-weaning growth traits and direct effects of calving interval traits were not different from zero. The presence of trade-offs between the direct effects of growth and reproductive traits were confirmed through regression from direct EBV of calving intervals over EBV of pre-weaning growth traits. In addition, regression analyses showed that selection to increase pre-weaning growth also increased calving intervals. Our results showed that pre-weaning growth and calving intervals are increasing over generations and that trade-offs occurred between those traits in the studied Nellore herd.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30114191 PMCID: PMC6095503 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0201392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Summary statistics for pre-weaning growth and reproductive traits of Nellore cattle.
| Trait | n | sd | CV(%) | Minimum | Maximum | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BW120, kg | 16,062 | 123.99 | 18.62 | 15.02 | 41.81 | 197.83 |
| BW205, kg | 16,812 | 177.53 | 27.57 | 15.53 | 60.48 | 289.30 |
| CI1, days | 2,536 | 553.24 | 181.04 | 32.73 | 300.00 | 1,448.00 |
| CI2, days | 1,915 | 485.31 | 153.26 | 31.58 | 313.00 | 1,419.00 |
| CI3, days | 1,436 | 455.54 | 144.91 | 31.81 | 308.00 | 1,211.00 |
| CI4, days | 1,114 | 445.32 | 137.17 | 30.80 | 310.00 | 1,094.00 |
1n = number of records; = mean; sd = standard deviation; CV = coefficient of variation
2 BW120 = body weight adjusted to 120 days of age; BW205 = body weight adjusted to 205 days of age; CI1 = first calving interval; CI2 = second calving interval; CI3 = third calving interval; CI4 = fourth calving interval.
Estimates for genetic trends (standard error) of direct and maternal effects of pre-weaning growth traits on each two-trait analysis with calving intervals.
| Trait | Direct effect (kg/generation) | Maternal effect (kg/generation) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BW120 | BW205 | BW120 | BW205 | |
| CI1 | 1.58 (0.03) | 2.64 (0.04) | 0.09 (0.01) | 0.18 (0.02) |
| CI2 | 1.60 (0.03) | 2.65 (0.04) | 0.09 (0.01) | 0.13 (0.01) |
| CI3 | 1.58 (0.03) | 2.66 (0.04) | 0.11 (0.01) | 0.16 (0.02) |
| CI4 | 1.56 (0.03) | 2.64 (0.04) | 0.12 (0.01) | 0.16 (0.02) |
1BW120 = body weight adjusted to 120 days of age; BW205 = body weight adjusted to 205 days of age
2CI1 = first calving interval; CI2 = second calving interval; CI3 = third calving interval; CI4 = fourth calving interval; Each linear regression coefficient of the estimated breeding value was calculated according to each two-trait combination analysis; all linear regression coefficient were significant (P< 0.0001).
Estimates of genetic trends (standard error) of direct effects of calving intervals on each two-trait analysis with pre-weaning growth.
| Trait | Direct effect (days/generation) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CI1 | CI2 | CI3 | CI4 | |
| BW120 | 4.23 (0.23) | 3.00 (0.46) | 5.00 (0.55) | 2.60 (0.45) |
| BW205 | 4.31 (0.42) | 3.39 (0.46) | 7.18 (0.55) | 4.36 (0.76) |
1CI1 = first calving interval; CI2 = second calving interval; CI3 = third calving interval; CI4 = fourth calving interval
2BW120 = body weight adjusted to 120 days of age; BW205 = body weight adjusted to 205 days of age; Each linear regression coefficient of the estimated breeding value was calculated according to each two-trait combination analysis; all linear regression coefficient were significant (P< 0.0001).
Posterior means (lower and upper limits of the highest posterior density interval with 90% of samples) of the correlations between pre-weaning growth and calving intervals.
| CI1 | CI2 | CI3 | CI4 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BW120 | 0.20 (-0.12; 0.56) | 0.25 (-0.08; 0.61) | 0.11 (-0.28; 0.55) | -0.06 (-0.57; 0.64) | |
| BW205 | 0.25 (-0.13; 0.62) | 0.31 (-0.01; 0.62) | 0.47 (0.09; 0.87) | 0.17 (-0.20; 0.58) | |
| BW120 | 0.31 (0.04; 0.58) | 0.16 (-0.13; 0.46) | 0.37 (0.10; 0.68) | 0.52 (-0.05; 0.96) | |
| BW205 | 0.33 (0.00; 0.64) | 0.21 (-0.09; 0.52) | 0.32 (-0.01; 0.62) | 0.26 (-0.12; 0.58) | |
| BW120 | 0.00 (-0.07; 0.07) | 0.02 (-0.06; 0.10) | 0.06 (-0.03; 0.16) | 0.07 (-0.04; 0.18) | |
| BW205 | 0.00 (-0.07; 0.07) | 0.04 (-0.03; 0.12) | -0.04 (-0.13; 0.04) | 0.02 (-0.08; 0.11) | |
| BW120 | 0.06 (0.01; 0.11) | 0.08 (0.02; 0.14) | 0.11 (0.04; 0.18) | 0.10 (0.02; 0.18) | |
| BW205 | 0.07 (0.02; 0.12) | 0.10 (0.04; 0.16) | 0.07 (0.01; 0.14) | 0.08 (0.00; 0.16) |
1r = genetics correlations between direct effects; r = genetics correlations between maternal and direct effects; r = environmental correlations; r = phenotypic correlations
2BW120 = body weight adjusted to 120 days of age; BW205 = body weight adjusted to 205 days of age
3CI1 = first calving interval; CI2 = second calving interval; CI3 = third calving interval; CI4 = fourth calving interval; in red is the amount of samples below zero, in percentage.
Fig 1Variation of estimated breeding values (EBV) for direct effects of the first (CI1), second (CI2), third (CI3) and fourth (CI4) calving intervals over the EBV for direct effects of body weight at 120 and 205 days of age.
The EBV for each animal is represented by the blue dots, the linear regression of EBV is represented by the red line) and the confidence interval is represented by the blue line). Slope (standard error) and significant level are depicted for each analysis of pre-weaning growth and calving intervals.
Fig 2Variation of estimated breeding values (EBV) for direct effects for first (CI1), second (CI2), third (CI3) and fourth calving interval (CI4) over estimated breeding values (EBV) for maternal effects for body weight at 120 and 205 days of age.
The EBV for each animal is represented by the blue dots, the linear regression of EBV is represented by the red line) and the confidence interval is represented by the blue line). Slope (standard error) and significant level are depicted for each analysis of pre-weaning growth and calving intervals.