J. Anim Sci.
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J. Anim Sci. 1981. 53:1210-1216.
© 1981 American Society of Animal Science

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Calving Ease and Growth Rate of Simmental-Sired Calves. III. Direct and Maternal Effects1

P. J. Burfening, D. D. Kress and R. L. Friedrich2

Montana State University, Bozeman 59717

Abstract

Field records from the American Simmental Association were used to estimate genetic parameters for direct and maternal effects of traits associated with dystocia. Estimates of the additive genetic variances of direct and maternal effects and of the additive genetic covariances of direct and maternal effects were calculated by equating the sire variance component, maternal grandsire variance component and co-variance component between sire and maternal grandsire to their biological causal components. Independent variables in the mixed-model, least-squares analyses were herd, sire or maternal grandsire of the calf, sex of calf and percentage Simmental in the calf. The dependent variables were calving ease (score), assisted births, birth weight and gestation length. Sire and maternal grandsire were significant sources of variation for all traits studied. Maternal grandsire accounted for two to three times more variation in calving ease and assisted births than did sire, whereas sire accounted for a larger percentage of the total variation in birth weight and gestation length. Heritability estimates for the maternal effects were .20, .13, .10 and .09 for calving ease, assisted births, birth weight and gestation length, respectively. Genetic correlations between the direct and maternal effects were —.53, —.55, —.24 and —.38 for calving ease, assisted births, birth weight and gestation length, respectively. The effect of these correlations on selection is discussed.


Footnotes

1 Published with the approval of the Director of the Montana Agr. Exp. Sta. as Journal Ser. No. 1018. Research supported in part by a grant from the National Association of Animal Breeders.

2 The authors thank the American Simmental Association for supplying the data used in this study.







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Copyright © 1981 by the American Society of Animal Science.