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Bayesian threshold analysis of direct and maternal genetic parameters for piglet mortality at farrowing in Large White, Landrace, and Pietrain populations

Authors :
Ibáñez-Escriche, Noelia|||0000-0002-6221-3576
Varona, L.
Casellas, J.
Quintanilla, R.
Noguera, J. L.
Source :
RiuNet. Repositorio Institucional de la Universitat Politécnica de Valéncia, instname
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Society of Animal Science, 2009.

Abstract

[EN] A Bayesian threshold model was fitted to analyze the genetic parameters for farrowing mortality at the piglet level in Large White, Landrace, and Pietrain populations. Field data were collected between 1999 and 2006. They were provided by 3 pig selection nucleus farms of a commercial breeding company registered in the Spanish Pig Data Bank (BDporc). Analyses were performed on 3 data sets of Large White (60,535 piglets born from 4,551 litters), Landrace (57,987 piglets from 5,008 litters), and Pietrain (42,707 piglets from 4,328 litters) populations. In the analysis, farrowing mortality was considered as a binary trait at the piglet level and scored as 1 (alive piglet) or 0 (dead piglet) at farrowing or within the first 12 h of life. Each breed was analyzed separately, and operational models included systematic effects (year-season, sex, litter size, and order of parity), direct and maternal additive genetic effects, and common litter effects. Analyses were performed by Bayesian methods using Gibbs sampling. The posterior means of direct heritability were 0.02, 0.06, and 0.10, and the posterior means of maternal heritability were 0.05, 0.13, and 0.06 for Large White, Landrace, and Pietrain populations, respectively. The posterior means of genetic correlation between the direct and maternal genetic effects for Landrace and Pietrain populations were -0.56 and -0.53, and the highest posterior intervals at 95% did not include zero. In contrast, the posterior mean of the genetic correlation between direct and maternal effects was 0.15 in the Large White population, with the null correlation included in the highest posterior interval at 95%. These results suggest that the genetic model of evaluation for the Landrace and Pietrain populations should include direct and maternal genetic effects, whereas farrowing mortality could be considered as a sow trait in the Large White population.<br />Financial support was provided by the IRTA, Spain (grant 050221102). The authors gratefully acknowledge the cooperative COPAGA (Lleida, Spain) for its collaboration and particularly thank Sergi Illan, Eva Ramells, and Eva Roca.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
RiuNet. Repositorio Institucional de la Universitat Politécnica de Valéncia, instname
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..6657870f7fb21bd06ad533bc2d39c586