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Comparison of three methodologies for the genetic study of lactation persistency in Holstein cattle from Antioquia.

Daniel Cardona-CifuentesAlbeiro López-HerreraLuis Gabriel González-HerreraJosé Julián Echeverri-Zuluaga
Published in: Tropical animal health and production (2021)
Persistency is the rate of decrease after milk production peak, mathematical models such as Wood's can be used to estimate it for describing the lactation curve and its rate of descent; random regression models are also useful, as they describe the genetic lactation curve for each animal. The objective of this study was to compare Best Linear Unbiased Prediction (BLUP), marker-assisted BLUP (MBLUP) model and random regression model (RRM) to estimate genetic parameters and breeding values for the lactation persistency curve. 4,658 test day measurements were available for 733 individuals, from which lactation curves were described to calculate persistency, estimating genetic parameters and values for this trait through BLUP and MBLUP. A similar process was done for RRM, where persistency was estimated from the genetic lactation curve. The heritability obtained using RRM was 0.51, greater than that obtained by BLUP (0.29) and MBLUP (0.21). The reliability of the genetic value for persistency in bulls was greater when RRM was used, but there was no correlation between the genetic values of different models. The highest heritability for persistency and the more reliable genetic values for bulls were achieved under the RRM, it allows positioning this methodology as an important tool for genetic evaluation of persistency.
Keyphrases
  • genome wide
  • dairy cows
  • human milk
  • copy number
  • dna methylation
  • gene expression
  • low birth weight