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J. Anim. Sci. 2003. 81:101-108
© 2003 American Society of Animal Science

The impact of data structure on genetic (co)variance components of early growth in sheep, estimated using an animal model with maternal effects

N. Maniatis1 and G. E. Pollott2

Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine, Department of Agricultural Sciences, Wye, Ashford, Kent, TN25 5AH, U.K.

2 Correspondence:
phone: +44 (0)20 759 42707; fax: +44 (0)20 759 42919; E-mail:
g.pollott{at}ic.ac.uk.

Several studies have noted high negative correlations between maternal genetic and direct additive effects and their influence on additive and maternal heritability of early growth traits in sheep. Multigeneration data from the Suffolk Sire Reference Scheme (SSRS) were used to investigate the effect of data structure on estimates of direct and maternal (co)variances for lamb 8-wk weight. In all analyses the additive, maternal genetic, maternal environmental, and residual effects were fitted along with the covariance between direct and maternal additive effects. The contributions of particular genetic relationships to the estimates were studied by analyzing subsets of the SSRS data. A further eight subsets were formed having 10% or 50% of the dams with their own records and having one or two, three or four, five or six, and more than six offspring per dam. Analysis of data having only 10% of the dams with their own record and one or two offspring records yielded a high negative correlation (-0.99) between direct and maternal genetic effects. However, the seven other data sets with more records per dam or a higher proportion of dams with their own records produced values of -0.35 to -0.51. Data structure and the number of dams and granddams with records are important determinants of estimated direct and maternal effects in early growth traits.

Key Words: Data Analysis • Genetic Parameters • Growth • Lambs • Maternal Effects




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