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Scientists with ARS's Animal Improvement Programs
Lab, at Beltsville, Maryland, have estimated the genetic merit of millions of
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Genetic Evaluations Help Breed Better Bossies
By Sharon
Durham January 9, 2007
Breeding dairy cattle is an inexact science, so many gene-linked
traits must be considered. Some of the major ones are quantity of milk
produced, its fat and protein content, mothers' pregnancy rates, calving ease
and, most recently, stillbirth rate. Such evaluating of genetic traits has
allowed dairy farmers to increase milk production to all-time highs.
Scientists recently added calf survival to a series of calculations
that lead to what's called a Lifetime Net Merit score. This is an economic
evaluation of a bull andby extensionwhat he will transmit to his
daughters and granddaughters. Sadly, about eight percent of calves born do not
survive beyond 48 hours and are considered stillborn.
According to
Duane
Norman, the research leader of the Animal Improvement Programs Laboratory
(AIPL)
in Beltsville, Md., when the scientists select traits for Lifetime Net Merit,
the animal's economic value, level of hereditary influence and amount of
variation are all taken into account. Norman oversees a database that includes
not only important yield traits, but also fitness traits that affect animals'
health, vigor and profitability, such as mastitis resistance, fertility and
longevity.
The AIPL is operated by the Agricultural Research Service, the
U.S. Department of Agriculture's principal
research agency.
According to AIPL geneticist
Paul
VanRaden, each genetic trait is given a percentage of emphasis for
calculating Lifetime Net Merit. For example, milk production accounts for 46
percent of the score, while calving ease and stillbirth are combined into a
calving ability index valued at 6 percent. Stillbirth data are collected
on-farm by dairy workers and provided to the National Association of Animal Breeders
based in Columbia, Mo.
Having information like this about genetic evaluation traits allows
breeders to make selections that best achieve their goals. This may involve
doing "corrective breeding" to strike a productive balance. For instance, a
dairy farmer may mate a cow with a history of calving difficulty to a sire
that's demonstrated his offspring are born relatively easily.
Read
more about this research in the January issue of Agricultural
Research.