Abstract

BackgroundGrowth and carcass traits are very important traits for broiler chickens. However, carcass traits can only be measured postmortem. Genomic selection may be a powerful tool for such traits because of its accurate prediction of breeding values of animals without own phenotypic information. This study investigated the efficiency of genomic prediction in Chinese triple-yellow chickens. As a new line, Chinese triple-yellow chicken was developed by cross-breeding and had a small effective population. Two growth traits and three carcass traits were analyzed: body weight at 6 weeks, body weight at 12 weeks, eviscerating percentage, breast muscle percentage and leg muscle percentage.ResultsGenomic prediction was assessed using a 4-fold cross-validation procedure for two validation scenarios. In the first scenario, each test data set comprised two half-sib families (family sample) and the rest represented the reference data. In the second scenario, the whole data were randomly divided into four subsets (random sample). In each fold of validation, one subset was used as the test data and the others as the reference data in each single validation. Genomic breeding values were predicted using a genomic best linear unbiased prediction model, a Bayesian least absolute shrinkage and selection operator model, and a Bayesian mixture model with four distributions. The accuracy of genomic estimated breeding value (GEBV) was measured as the correlation between GEBV and the corrected phenotypic value. Using the three models, the correlations ranged from 0.448 to 0.468 for the two growth traits and from 0.176 to 0.255 for the three carcass traits in the family sample scenario, and were between 0.487 and 0.536 for growth traits and between 0.312 and 0.430 for carcass traits in the random sample scenario. The differences in the prediction accuracies between the three models were very small; the Bayesian mixture model was slightly more accurate. According to the results from the random sample scenario, the accuracy of GEBV was 0.197 higher than the conventional pedigree index, averaged over the five traits.ConclusionsThe results indicated that genomic selection could greatly improve the accuracy of selection in chickens, compared with conventional selection. Genomic selection for growth and carcass traits in broiler chickens is promising.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12863-014-0110-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Growth and carcass traits are very important traits for broiler chickens

  • The main objective of this study was to investigate the accuracy of genomic selection for a population with small effective population size and small reference population

  • The accuracy of genomic prediction This study investigated the performance of genomic predictions in Chinese triple-yellow chickens, using a reference population of F2 birds

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Summary

Introduction

Growth and carcass traits are very important traits for broiler chickens. The Illumina Chicken 60K SNP Beadchip is available [9]; genomic selection has been taken into consideration in chicken breeding. Genomic selection makes it possible to select. Breeding values of carcass traits predicted using the indirect measurements could be inaccurate. With genome-wide dense markers, it is possible to predict breeding values accurately, based on direct measurements of carcass traits from a reference population. Some studies on genomic selection in chickens have been carried out [11,12,13]; none of these studies dealt with direct measures of carcass traits

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