Abstract

ABSTRACT Changes in wool prices, labour costs and animal welfare have sparked interest in several new sheep traits. Shedding, the ability of moulting or seasonal wool loss in sheep, is one of them. Here, we aimed to develop breeding values for shedding using existing data from New Zealand flocks. We used breeder-collected shedding scores, 0 = ‘no shedding on any part of the body’ to 10 = ‘wool shed fully from all the body’, for Wiltshire and Wiltshire-composite lambs born between 2003 and 2022. After QC, 20,653 phenotypic records from 25,066 animals with pedigree information (393 sires and 7439 dams from 12 flocks) were included in the analyses. Genetic parameters and breeding values were obtained using a genetic additive model with pedigree data (BLUP model), assuming shedding scores were quantitative. The genetic model incorporated the following variables: date of birth, sex, birth and rearing rank, age of dam and contemporary group. We found a high heritability for lamb shedding, 0.54 (0.02), and estimated a low-to-moderate prediction accuracy of breeding values (ranging from 0.09 to 0.36) using forward-validation. Our results confirmed that shedding can be subject to selection and that pedigree-based breeding values for this trait can be a useful tool for breeders.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call