Italian Journal of Animal Science (Dec 2020)
Estimates of non-genetic effects for measures of hunting performance in short-haired and rough-haired Italian hound
Abstract
The aim of this work was to estimate the effects of eight non-genetic factors (sex, type of coat, pigmentation, type of the trial, the number of the judges in the jury, the location where the competition took place, the subjectivity of the judge and the breeders) on the assessment of seven hunting traits (morphology, the breed style, search, approach, find, pursuit and voice) for the short-haired and rough-haired Italian Hound. The data consisted of 3172 field trial records between the years 2016 and 2017. The Mann–Whitney test and Kruskal–Wallis test showed that each factor was statistically significant for some traits: the sex of the dogs was statistically significant only for the evaluation of the morphology the type of coat for breed style, search, approach, find and voice; the pigmentation for all traits excluding approach; the number of judges for morphology, approach and find; the type of trial for all traits excluding voice. Spearman’s ρ (rho) correlation showed that high phenotypic correlations were between morphology, breed style and search. These traits showed low to moderate correlations with the other traits except breed style and search vs. pursuit. Furthermore, principal component analysis for the factor judge, location and breeders showed that among the seven traits assessed during the trials, the morphology and the breed style had the highest loading on the final score. Our results suggest that the effect of all the non-genetic factors analysed must be taken into account by the judges during the evaluation of the dogs.Highlights We evaluated the effects of eight non-genetic factors on the assessment of seven hunting traits for the Italian Hound. All the non-genetic factors had influence on some of the hunting traits considered. Principal component analysis showed that the highest loading for morphology and breed style are on location, judge and breeder. High phenotypic correlations were between morphology, breed style, search and pursuit.
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