Genetic parameters for longevity traits in UK dairy goats
Abstract
Genomic selection on UK dairy goats began in 2015. New traits for selection have evolved
since that time with the addition of new genotypes for the reference population. The
objectives of this study were to define longevity in terms of lifespan and production, to
estimate their heritabilities, and calculate phenotypic and genetic correlations. The dataset
comprised records on 12,233 female dairy goats based on two genetically linked farm sites.
The pedigree contained information on 40,422 individuals. Heritabilities of the longevity
traits were found to range from 0.08 to 0.46, with moderate to high phenotypic and genetic
correlations between the lifetime longevity and production longevity traits. The results will
allow genetic improvement in dairy goats by incorporating longevity into a breeding index
with production, health and maintenance traits. The next step following this work is to
produce genomic breeding values for longevity traits that will allow genomic selection for use
in UK dairy goat breeding programmes.
Citation
Geddes, L., Desire, S., Mucha, S., Coffey, M., Mrode, R. and Conington, J. 2018. Genetic parameters for longevity traits in UK dairy goats. IN: Proceedings of the World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production, Volume Species - Caprine: 547.