Abstract

The objective of this study was to evaluate the genetic diversity of the Tropical Milking Criollo cattle (TMC) breed in Mexico through parameters derived from pedigree and genomic information assessment. The pedigree file consisted of 3780 animals. Seventy-nine bovines were genotyped with the medium-density single nucleotide polymorphism chip and considered a reference population for pedigree analysis. The effective population size and the probability of gene origin used to assess the evolution of genetic diversity were calculated with pedigree information. Inbreeding coefficients were evaluated based on pedigree (), the genomic relationship matrix (), and runs of homozygosity () of different length classes. The average inbreeding was 2.82 ± 2.66%, −0.7 ± 3.8%, and 10.9 ± 3.0% for , , and , respectively. Correlation between and was significant only for runs of homozygosity > 4 Mb, indicating the of a population with an average equivalent complete generation of five only recovers the most recent inbreeding. The parameters of the probability of gene origin indicated the existence of genetic bottlenecks and the loss of genetic diversity in the history of the TMC cattle population; however, pedigree and genomic information revealed the existence of current sufficient genetic diversity to design a sustainable breeding program.

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