Abstract

BackgroundWhile the adoption of genomic evaluations in livestock has increased genetic gain rates, its effects on genetic diversity and accumulation of inbreeding have raised concerns in cattle populations. Increased inbreeding may affect fitness and decrease the mean performance for economically important traits, such as fertility and growth in beef cattle, with the age of inbreeding having a possible effect on the magnitude of inbreeding depression. The purpose of this study was to determine changes in genetic diversity as a result of the implementation of genomic selection in Angus cattle and quantify potential inbreeding depression effects of total pedigree and genomic inbreeding, and also to investigate the impact of recent and ancient inbreeding.ResultsWe found that the yearly rate of inbreeding accumulation remained similar in sires and decreased significantly in dams since the implementation of genomic selection. Other measures such as effective population size and the effective number of chromosome segments show little evidence of a detrimental effect of using genomic selection strategies on the genetic diversity of beef cattle. We also quantified pedigree and genomic inbreeding depression for fertility and growth. While inbreeding did not affect fertility, an increase in pedigree or genomic inbreeding was associated with decreased birth weight, weaning weight, and post-weaning gain in both sexes. We also measured the impact of the age of inbreeding and found that recent inbreeding had a larger depressive effect on growth than ancient inbreeding.ConclusionsIn this study, we sought to quantify and understand the possible consequences of genomic selection on the genetic diversity of American Angus cattle. In both sires and dams, we found that, generally, genomic selection resulted in decreased rates of pedigree and genomic inbreeding accumulation and increased or sustained effective population sizes and number of independently segregating chromosome segments. We also found significant depressive effects of inbreeding accumulation on economically important growth traits, particularly with genomic and recent inbreeding.

Highlights

  • While the adoption of genomic evaluations in livestock has increased genetic gain rates, its effects on genetic diversity and accumulation of inbreeding have raised concerns in cattle populations

  • We quantified the magnitude and direction of the effect of pedigree and genomic inbreeding on heifer pregnancy (HP), and birth weight (BiW), weaning weight (WW), and post-weaning gain (PWG) in males and females

  • In the present study, we measured the changes in the genetic diversity of American Angus cattle by estimating yearly and generational inbreeding rate, generation intervals, effective population sizes, and the effective number of independently segregating chromosome segments in sires and dams born between 2000 and 2017

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Summary

Introduction

While the adoption of genomic evaluations in livestock has increased genetic gain rates, its effects on genetic diversity and accumulation of inbreeding have raised concerns in cattle populations. The purpose of this study was to determine changes in genetic diversity as a result of the implementation of genomic selection in Angus cattle and quantify potential inbreeding depression effects of total pedigree and genomic inbreed‐ ing, and to investigate the impact of recent and ancient inbreeding. It has been more than two decades since the idea of using genomic markers to increase the prediction accuracy. The reality has been that yearly and generational rates of pedigree and genomic inbreeding and coancestry have increased in Dutch-Flemish [7], French [8], and North American [9] populations of the Holstein–Friesian dairy breed

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