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Principles of Agricultural Science – Animal 1. 2 Heritability and the Environment Principles of Agricultural Science – Animal Unit 7 – Lesson 7.2 Predicting.

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Presentation on theme: "Principles of Agricultural Science – Animal 1. 2 Heritability and the Environment Principles of Agricultural Science – Animal Unit 7 – Lesson 7.2 Predicting."— Presentation transcript:

1 Principles of Agricultural Science – Animal 1

2 2 Heritability and the Environment Principles of Agricultural Science – Animal Unit 7 – Lesson 7.2 Predicting Genetic Inheritance

3 Genetics The study of heredity Useful in both explaining and predicting the occurrence of important traits in animals

4 Two Types of Traits Qualitative –Traits are easily observed and called “Either – or” traits. –Example: A bovine either has horns or it is polled, which is without horns. Quantitative –Traits are measurable. –Example: Growth rate is measured on a scale. –Example: Mature height is measured with a ruler.

5 Qualitative Traits Qualitative traits –Traits that are easily seen and controlled by a single gene pair. –Gene expression is not altered by the environment. –Ex: The coat color in Angus cattle. Black Angus Red Angus

6 Quantitative Traits Quantitative traits –Expression controlled by more than one gene pair –Expression can be modified by environmental factors –Measurable

7 Quantitative Traits Trait is measured by degrees depending on the mix of genes. –Ex: Growth rate may be measured in pounds of weight gained each day. Resulting growth rate may be very low, very high, or anywhere in between. Zero growthFastest growth Range of possible measured growth rate

8 Heritability of Qualitative Traits Performance = Genetics + Environment Heritability = The percent of performance controlled by genetics Selection works best on highly heritable traits

9 Separating Genetics from Environment Contemporary Group Ratios Expected Progeny Differences Economic Indexes Genomics (New) All may be used to select animals with the best genetics for important traits. 9

10 Contemporary Group Ratios Compares animals of the same gender and approximate age raised under the same environmental conditions Ratio = The performance of an animal divided by the group average, multiplied by 100 10

11 Contemporary Group Ratios Example Boar #1 Average Daily Gain (ADG) = 2.8 pounds/day Pen average = 2.6 ADG Boar #1 ratio = (2.8/2.6)x100 = 107.7 –Boars near 100 are “average” Animals with higher ratios likely to sire faster gaining offspring 11

12 References Kemp, R.A. and Rothchild, M. (1994). Estimating genetic merit. Retrieved December 15, 2008 from http://www.ces.purdue.edu/extmedia/NSIF/NSIF- FS8.html. http://www.ces.purdue.edu/extmedia/NSIF/NSIF- FS8.html South Dakota State University. (2008). What is a contemporary group? Retrieved December 15, 2008 from http://ars.sdstate.edu/faculty/Pruitt/as474/labs_fil es/perf%20records%20S%2008.pdf. http://ars.sdstate.edu/faculty/Pruitt/as474/labs_fil es/perf%20records%20S%2008.pdf 12


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