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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Animal Science Année : 2013

Potential benefits of genomic selection on genetic gain of small ruminant breeding programs

Résumé

In conventional small ruminant breeding programs, only pedigree and phenotype records are used to make selection decisions but prospects of including genomic information are now under consideration. The objective of this study was to assess the potential benefits of genomic selection on the genetic gain in French sheep and goat breeding designs of today. Traditional and genomic scenarios were modeled with deterministic methods for 3 breeding programs. The models included decisional variables related to male selection candidates, progeny testing capacity, and economic weights that were optimized to maximize annual genetic gain (AGG) of i) a meat sheep breeding program that improved a meat trait of heritability (h(2)) = 0.30 and a maternal trait of h(2) = 0.09 and ii) dairy sheep and goat breeding programs that improved a milk trait of h(2) = 0.30. Values of +/- 0.20 of genetic correlation between meat and maternal traits were considered to study their effects on AGG. The Bulmer effect was accounted for and the results presented here are the averages of AGG after 10 generations of selection. Results showed that current traditional breeding programs provide an AGG of 0.095 genetic standard deviation (sigma(a)) for meat and 0.061 sigma(a) for maternal trait in meat breed and 0.147 sigma(a) and 0.120 sigma(a) in sheep and goat dairy breeds, respectively. By optimizing decisional variables, the AGG with traditional selection methods increased to 0.139 sigma(a) for meat and 0.096 sigma(a) for maternal traits in meat breeding programs and to 0.174 sigma(a) and 0.183 sigma(a) in dairy sheep and goat breeding programs, respectively. With a medium-sized reference population (nref) of 2,000 individuals, the best genomic scenarios gave an AGG that was 17.9% greater than with traditional selection methods with optimized values of decisional variables for combined meat and maternal traits in meat sheep, 51.7% in dairy sheep, and 26.2% in dairy goats. The superiority of genomic schemes increased with the size of the reference population and genomic selection gave the best results when nref > 1,000 individuals for dairy breeds and nref > 2,000 individuals for meat breed. Genetic correlation between meat and maternal traits had a large impact on the genetic gain of both traits. Changes in AGG due to correlation were greatest for low heritable maternal traits. As a general rule, AGG was increased both by optimizing selection designs and including genomic information.
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hal-02646766 , version 1 (29-05-2020)

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Félicien Shumbusho, Jérôme Raoul, Jean-Michel Astruc, Isabelle Palhiere Palhière, Jean Michel J. M. Elsen. Potential benefits of genomic selection on genetic gain of small ruminant breeding programs. Journal of Animal Science, 2013, 91 (8), pp.3644 - 3657. ⟨10.2527/jas.2012-6205⟩. ⟨hal-02646766⟩
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