Abstract

BackgroundThe objective of the present study was to estimate (co)variance components of female fertility traits in Chinese Holsteins, considering fertility traits in different parities as different traits. Data on 88,647 females with 215,632 records (parities) were collected during 2000 to 2014 from 32 herds in the Sanyuan Lvhe Dairy Cattle Center, Beijing, China. The analyzed female fertility traits included interval from calving to first insemination, interval from first to last insemination, days open, conception rate at first insemination, number of inseminations per conception and non-return rates within 56 days after first insemination.ResultsThe descriptive statistics showed that the average fertility of heifers was superior to that of cows. Moreover, the genetic correlations between the performances of a trait in heifers and in cows were all moderate to high but far from one, which suggested that the performances of a trait in heifers and cows should be considered as different but genetically correlated traits in genetic evaluations. On the other hand, genetic correlations between performances of a trait in different parities of cows were greater than 0.87, with only a few exceptions, but variances were not homogeneous across parities for some traits. The estimated heritabilities of female fertility traits were low; all were below 0.049 (except for interval from calving to first insemination). Additionally, the heritabilities of the heifer interval traits were lower than those of the corresponding cow interval traits. Moreover, the heritabilities of the interval traits were higher than those of the threshold traits when measuring similar fertility functions. In general, estimated genetic correlations between traits were highly consistent with the biological categories of the female fertility traits.ConclusionsInterval from calving to first insemination, interval from first to last insemination and non-return rates within 56 days after first insemination are recommended to be included in the selection index of the Chinese Holstein population. The parameters estimated in the present study will facilitate the development of a genetic evaluation system for female fertility traits to improve the reproduction efficiency of Chinese Holsteins.

Highlights

  • The objective of the present study was to estimatevariance components of female fertility traits in Chinese Holsteins, considering fertility traits in different parities as different traits

  • This study investigated the relationships among parities and variance components in each parity for female fertility traits in Chinese Holsteins

  • Interval from first to last insemination (IFL), NRR56 and Interval from calving to first insemination (ICF) are recommended to be included in the selection index of the Chinese Holstein population

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Summary

Introduction

The objective of the present study was to estimate (co)variance components of female fertility traits in Chinese Holsteins, considering fertility traits in different parities as different traits. Female fertility traits are the most economically functional traits affecting the efficiency of the dairy industry. Due to the unfavorable correlations between yield and female fertility traits, intensive selection for milk production over the past five decades has led to a strong decline in cow reproduction, in highproducing populations [4, 5]. The heritabilities of most fertility traits are typically below 5% [6,7,8], selection for female fertility is not as efficient as selection for production traits. The reproductive decline in modern dairy cattle cannot be ignored, as the costs of extra inseminations, fertility treatments and involuntary culling are increasing

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