Animal (Dec 2021)

Genetic analyses of metabolic body weight, carcass weight and body conformation traits in Nordic dairy cattle

  • T. Mehtiö,
  • T. Pitkänen,
  • A.-M. Leino,
  • E.A. Mäntysaari,
  • R. Kempe,
  • E. Negussie,
  • M.H. Lidauer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
p. 100398

Abstract

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Improving feed efficiency in dairy cattle by animal breeding has started in the Nordic countries. One of the two traits included in the applied Saved feed index is called maintenance and it is based on the breeding values for metabolic BW (MBW). However, BW recording based on heart girth measurements is decreasing and recording based on scales is increasing only slowly, which may weaken the maintenance index in future. Therefore, the benefit of including correlated traits, like carcass weight and conformation traits, is of interest. In this study, we estimated genetic variation and genetic correlations for eight traits describing the energy requirement for maintenance in dairy cattle including: first, second and third parity MBW based on heart girth measurements, carcass weight (CARW) and predicted MBW (pMBW) based on predicted slaughter weight, and first parity conformation traits stature (ST), chest width (CW) and body depth (BD). The data consisted of 21 329 records from Finnish Ayrshire and 9 780 records from Holstein cows. Heritability estimates were 0.44, 0.53, 0.56, 0.52, 0.54, 0.60, 0.17 and 0.26 for MBW1, MBW2, MBW3, CARW, pMBW, ST, CW and BD, respectively. Estimated genetic correlations among MBW traits were strong (>0.95). Genetic correlations between slaughter traits (CARW and pMBW) and MBW traits were higher (from 0.77 to 0.90) than between conformation and MBW traits (from 0.47 to 0.70). Our results suggest that including information on carcass weight and body conformation as correlated traits into the maintenance index is beneficial when direct BW measurements are not available or are difficult or expensive to obtain.

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