Abstract

BackgroundFaecal egg counts are a common indicator of nematode infection and since it is a heritable trait, it provides a marker for selective breeding. However, since resistance to disease changes as the adaptive immune system develops, quantifying temporal changes in heritability could help improve selective breeding programs. Faecal egg counts can be extremely skewed and difficult to handle statistically. Therefore, previous heritability analyses have log transformed faecal egg counts to estimate heritability on a latent scale. However, such transformations may not always be appropriate. In addition, analyses of faecal egg counts have typically used univariate rather than multivariate analyses such as random regression that are appropriate when traits are correlated. We present a method for estimating the heritability of untransformed faecal egg counts over the grazing season using random regression.ResultsReplicating standard univariate analyses, we showed the dependence of heritability estimates on choice of transformation. Then, using a multitrait model, we exposed temporal correlations, highlighting the need for a random regression approach. Since random regression can sometimes involve the estimation of more parameters than observations or result in computationally intractable problems, we chose to investigate reduced rank random regression. Using standard software (WOMBAT), we discuss the estimation of variance components for log transformed data using both full and reduced rank analyses. Then, we modelled the untransformed data assuming it to be negative binomially distributed and used Metropolis Hastings to fit a generalized reduced rank random regression model with an additive genetic, permanent environmental and maternal effect. These three variance components explained more than 80 % of the total phenotypic variation, whereas the variance components for the log transformed data accounted for considerably less. The heritability, on a link scale, increased from around 0.25 at the beginning of the grazing season to around 0.4 at the end.ConclusionsRandom regressions are a useful tool for quantifying sources of variation across time. Our MCMC (Markov chain Monte Carlo) algorithm provides a flexible approach to fitting random regression models to non-normal data. Here we applied the algorithm to negative binomially distributed faecal egg count data, but this method is readily applicable to other types of overdispersed data.

Highlights

  • Faecal egg counts are a common indicator of nematode infection and since it is a heritable trait, it provides a marker for selective breeding

  • The second challenge is that, as the adaptive immune response develops, the sources of variation and the heritability of faecal egg counts are expected to change over time, which suggests that a multivariate approach may be appropriate

  • We examined the use of log transformed faecal egg count data by comparing univariate heritability estimates of log(FEC + c) for a range of values of c over the sevenmonth period

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Summary

Introduction

Faecal egg counts are a common indicator of nematode infection and since it is a heritable trait, it provides a marker for selective breeding. Previous heritability analyses have log transformed faecal egg counts to estimate heritability on a latent scale. Such transformations may not always be appropriate. Faecal egg count is a commonly used indicator of susceptibility to gastrointestinal nematode infection and provides a marker for selective breeding programs. The second challenge is that, as the adaptive immune response develops, the sources of variation and the heritability of faecal egg counts are expected to change over time, which suggests that a multivariate approach may be appropriate. The goal of this paper was to estimate the change in heritability of faecal egg count over the grazing season

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