Genetic association of productive traits, carcass measurements and age at first calving in the genetic evaluation of the Nellore breed

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The aim was to evaluate the genetic association between sexual precocity and productive performance in Nellore cattle. Records of standardized body weights at 120 (W120), 210 (W210), 365 (W365), and 450 (W450) days of age, ribeye area (REA), backfat thickness (BFT), and age at first calving (AFC) were used. The mixed linear model included the fixed effects of contemporary groups (composed of herd, year, and season of birth, as well as the animal's sex), in addition to the random effects of direct additive genetic, maternal genetic (for W120 and W210), and maternal permanent environment. The variance components were estimated by the restricted maximum likelihood method. The obtained direct heritability estimates were 0.45, 0.49, 0.42, 0.40, 0.33, 0.19, and 0.08 for W120, W210, W365, W450, REA, BFT, and AFC, respectively. The Spearman correlations of the animals' breeding values between the weight development estimates were of a high order, and for the traits of backfat thickness and age at first calving, it was 0.27, indicating a relationship at older ages with the onset of the acceleration of adipogenesis. The genetic gain obtained in AFC (0.48 days) with the correlated response related to REA and BFT was -0.05 and -0.19 days, respectively. The genetic correlations obtained between AFC and the weight development traits were positive, however negative with the carcass-associated traits, indicating that the offspring are reproductively precocious, yet lighter and with a greater finish of subcutaneous fat..

Article activity feed