| Literature DB >> 30390619 |
Thinh T Chu1,2, Setegn W Alemu3, Elise Norberg3,4, Anders C Sørensen3, John Henshall5, Rachel Hawken5, Just Jensen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A breeding program for commercial broiler chicken that is carried out under strict biosecure conditions can show reduced genetic gain due to genotype by environment interactions (G × E) between bio-secure (B) and commercial production (C) environments. Accuracy of phenotype-based best linear unbiased prediction of breeding values of selection candidates using sib-testing in C is low. Genomic prediction based on dense genetic markers may improve accuracy of selection. Stochastic simulation was used to explore the benefits of genomic selection in breeding schemes for broiler chicken that include birds in both B and C for assessment of phenotype.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30390619 PMCID: PMC6215651 DOI: 10.1186/s12711-018-0430-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Sel Evol ISSN: 0999-193X Impact factor: 4.297
Levels of investigated factors in the simulated breeding programs
| Investigated factors | Levels |
|---|---|
| Proportion of birds transferred to C (%) | 0; 15; 30; 45 |
| Heritability in B environment | 0.28 |
| Heritability in C environment | 0.15; 0.25; 0.35 |
| Genetic correlation ( | 0.5; 0.7; 0.9 |
Sensitivity analysis 1 and 2 simulating breeding schemes with 0, 15, 30 and 45% of birds in C (P0, P15, P30 and P45), using 8 (H8) or 10 (H10) offspring per hen hatched for phenotype testing, and allocating 15, 30, 45 and 60% of total genotyping to birds in C (GC15, GC30, GC45 and GC60)
| Scenario | Total number of birds hatched for phenotyping | Total number of genotyped birds | Number of birds moved to C (% of birds hatched) | Number of birds in C genotyped (% of total genotyping) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sensitivity analysis 1 | ||||
| H8-P0 | 1280 | 640 | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| H8-P15 | 1280 | 640 | 192 (15%) | 96 (15%) |
| H8-P30 | 1280 | 640 | 384 (30%) | 192 (30%) |
| H8-P45 | 1280 | 640 | 576 (45%) | 288 (45%) |
| H10-P0 | 1600 | 800 | 0 (0%) | 0 (0%) |
| H10-P15 | 1600 | 800 | 240 (15%) | 120 (15%) |
| H10-P30 | 1600 | 800 | 480 (30%) | 240 (30%) |
| H10-P45 | 1600 | 800 | 720 (45%) | 360 (45%) |
| Sensitivity analysis 2 | ||||
| P15-GC15 | 1280 | 640 | 192 (15%) | 96 (15%) |
| P15-GC30 | 1280 | 640 | 192 (15%) | 192 (30%) |
| P30-GC15 | 1280 | 640 | 384 (30%) | 96 (15%) |
| P30-GC30 | 1280 | 640 | 384 (30%) | 192 (30%) |
| P30-GC45 | 1280 | 640 | 384 (30%) | 288 (45%) |
| P30-GC60 | 1280 | 640 | 384 (30%) | 384 (60%) |
Fig. 1Genetic gain per time step () (mean over 50 replicates ± standard error) of scenarios with different proportions of birds in C (P %) for different levels of the genetic correlation () between the B and C traits and of heritability () of the C trait
Fig. 2Rate of inbreeding per generation (%) (mean over 150 replicates ± standard error) of breeding schemes with different proportions of birds in C for different levels of the genetic correlation () between the B and C traits
Fig. 3Rate of inbreeding per generation (%) (mean over 200 replicates ± standard error) for different levels of the genetic correlation () between the B and C traits and of the heritability () of the C trait
Fig. 4Genetic gain per time step () (mean over 50 replicates ± standard error) of sensitivity simulation 1 for breeding schemes with 8 (H8) or 10 (H10) offspring per hen per time step and different proportions of birds in C (P %)
Fig. 5Genetic gain per time step () (mean over 50 replicates ± standard error) of sensitivity simulation 3 for breeding schemes with 15 and 30% (P15 and P30) of birds in C and allocating 15, 30, 45 and 60% of genotyping to birds in C (GC15, GC30, GC45 and GC60)