Abstract

BackgroundThe Finnhorse was established as a breed more than 110 years ago by combining local Finnish landraces. Since its foundation, the breed has experienced both strong directional selection, especially for size and colour, and severe population bottlenecks that are connected with its initial foundation and subsequent changes in agricultural and forestry practices. Here, we used sequences of the mitochondrial control region and genomic single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to estimate the genetic diversity and differentiation of the four Finnhorse breeding sections: trotters, pony-sized horses, draught horses and riding horses. Furthermore, we estimated inbreeding and effective population sizes over time to infer the history of this breed.ResultsWe found a high level of mitochondrial genetic variation and identified 16 of the 18 haplogroups described in present-day horses. Interestingly, one of these detected haplogroups was previously reported only in the Przewalski’s horse. Female effective population sizes were in the thousands, but declines were evident at the times when the breed and its breeding sections were founded. By contrast, nuclear variation and effective population sizes were small (approximately 50). Nevertheless, inbreeding in Finnhorses was lower than in many other horse breeds. Based on nuclear SNP data, genetic differentiation among the four breeding sections was strongest between the draught horses and the three other sections (FST = 0.007–0.018), whereas based on mitochondrial DNA data, it was strongest between the trotters and the pony-sized and riding horses (ΦST = 0.054–0.068).ConclusionsThe existence of a Przewalski’s horse haplogroup in the Finnhorse provides new insights into the domestication of the horse, and this finding supports previous suggestions of a close relationship between the Finnhorse and eastern primitive breeds. The high level of mitochondrial DNA variation in the Finnhorse supports its domestication from a large number of mares but also reflects that its founding depended on many local landraces. Although inbreeding in Finnhorses was lower than in many other horse breeds, the small nuclear effective population sizes of each of its breeding sections can be considered as a warning sign, which warrants changes in breeding practices.

Highlights

  • The Finnhorse was established as a breed more than 110 years ago by combining local Finnish landraces

  • A study of the genome-wide genetic diversity of 36 horse breeds [6] based on single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) genotyping data showed that the diversity was low in breeds that have experienced high selective

  • For the other breeds for which we had more than 20 representatives, Shetland ponies were in haplogroups D, G, I, L, M, N and Q, warmblood trotters in A, B, G, I, L and N and Pura Raza Españolas in B, G, L, N and Q

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Summary

Introduction

The Finnhorse was established as a breed more than 110 years ago by combining local Finnish landraces. We used sequences of the mitochondrial control region and genomic single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) to estimate the genetic diversity and differentiation of the four Finnhorse breeding sections: trotters, pony-sized horses, draught horses and riding horses. Domestication has influenced the behaviour, morphology, physiology and performance of a species through selective breeding. A high level of diversity was detected in landraces or breeds that were old, had large population sizes, were outcrossing, displayed a high level of phenotypic diversity, or had experienced weaker artificial selection (e.g., Mongolian, Tuva and New Forest Pony; ­HE ranging from 0.314 to 0.322). The extremely low genetic variation of the horse Y-chromosome demonstrates that the domestic horse has only few paternal founders [7,8,9], whereas the genetic variation of the maternally-inherited mitochondrial DNA is very high [10,11,12]

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