Abstract

Yearling weight gain in male and female Israeli Holstein calves, defined as 365 × ((weight − 35)/age at weight) + 35, was analyzed from 814,729 records on 368,255 animals from 740 herds recorded between 1994 and 2021. The variance components were calculated based on valid records from 2008 through 2017 for each sex separately and both sexes jointly by a single-trait individual animal model analysis, which accounted for repeat records on animals. The analysis model also included the square root, linear, and quadratic effects of age at weight. Heritability and repeatability were 0.35 and 0.71 in the analysis of both sexes and similar in the single sex analyses. The regression of yearling weight gain on birth date in the complete data set was −0.96 kg/year. The complete data set was also analyzed by the same model as the variance component analysis, including both sexes and accounting for differing variance components for each sex. The genetic trend for yearling weight gain, including both sexes, was 1.02 kg/year. Genetic evaluations for yearling weight gain was positively correlated with genetic evaluations for milk, fat, protein production, and cow survival but negatively correlated with female fertility. Yearling weight gain was also correlated with the direct effect on dystocia, and increased yearling weight gain resulted in greater frequency of dystocia. Of the 1749 Israeli Holstein bulls genotyped with reliabilities >50%, 1445 had genetic evaluations. As genotyping of these bulls was performed using several single nucleotide polymorhphism (SNP) chip platforms, we included only those markers that were genotyped in >90% of the tested cohort. A total of 40,498 SNPs were retained. More than 400 markers had significant effects after permutation and correction for multiple testing (pnominal < 1 × 10−8). Considering all SNPs simultaneously, 0.69 of variance among the sires’ transmitting ability was explained. There were 24 markers with coefficients of determination for yearling weight gain >0.04. One marker, BTA-75458-no-rs on chromosome 5, explained ≈6% of the variance among the estimated breeding values for yearling weight gain. ARS-BFGL-NGS-39379 had the fifth largest coefficient of determination in the current study and was also found to have a significant effect on weight at an age of 13–14 months in a previous study on Holsteins. Significant genomic effects on yearling weight gain were mainly associated with milk production quantitative trait loci, specifically with kappa casein metabolism.

Highlights

  • The objectives of this study were to estimate genetic and environmental parameters of yearling growth rate for both male and female Israeli Holstein calves, to compute genetic evaluations for this trait based on the individual animal model, to estimate phenotypic and genetic trends, and to perform a genome-wide association study (GWAS) based on the genetic evaluations of bulls for yearling growth rate with genotypes

  • yearling weight gains (YG) of male and female calves is highly correlated genetically; records from both sexes can be combined into a joint genetic analysis

  • YG is positively correlated with milk production traits but economically negatively correlated with fertility and the direct effect of dystocia

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Summary

Introduction

The economic value for growth rate may be positive for countries in which meat production of surplus calves from the dairy herd is economically important. Weller and Ezra [3] used 285,800 records on 105,935 animals from 458 herds recorded between 1994 and 2007 to estimate variance components of growth rate for male and female calves, and both sexes jointly. They estimated genetic and phenotypic trends for growth rate and the genetic correlations between growth rate and other economic traits

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