Abstract

Abstract. A total of 2095 lactation records of Holstein Friesian cattle kept at Dalla Farm in Egypt during the period from 1988 to 1992 were used in this study. Those data were used to estimate variances from direct and maternal genetic effects. The data was analyzed by using Multiple Traits Derivative Free Restricted Maximum Likelihood (MTDFREML) according to BOLDMAN et al. (1995) using repeatability Animal Model. Two models were used: Model 1 includes month of calving, year of calving, parity as fixed effects, days open and days dry as covariates and direct genetic, maternal genetic, covariance between direct and maternal genetic, permanent environmental and residual as random effects; Model 2 is similar to Model 1, but excluding additive maternal and covariance between additive direct and maternal effects. Estimates of heritability for 305 day milk yield (305 dMY) were 0.22 and 0.23, for Model 1 and Model 2, respectively. Heritability estimates for age at first calving (AFC) were 0.77 and 0.82 for Model 1 and model 2, respectively. The removal of additive maternal genetic effects and covariance between direct and maternal genetic effects from the model increased estimates for heritability of additive genetic effects by 0.01 and 0.05 for 305 dMY and AFC, respectively. Then, the additive maternal genetic effect and covariance between direct and maternal genetic effects do not seem to make important contributions to the phenotypic variance for milk yield and age at first calving, and these effects are probably not important for genetic evaluations.

Highlights

  • Animal models used to analyze maternally influenced traits of dairy cattle typically include direct and maternal effects andArch

  • The variance for additive maternal genetic effects were 1% and 2% of phenotypic variance for 305 day milk yield (305 dMY) and at first calving (AFC), respectively, and the covariance between maternal and direct genetic effects were 2% and 6% for the two traits, respectively

  • The mean of 305 day milk yield (4746 kg, Table 2) was higher than those estimated on other sets of Holstein Friesian cattle in commercial farms in Egypt (e.g. AFIFI et al, 1992 (3838 kg) and EL–ARIAN et al, 2001 (4544 kg))

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Summary

Introduction

Animal models used to analyze maternally influenced traits of dairy cattle (e.g., milk yield and age at first calving) typically include direct and maternal effects andArch. Animal models used to analyze maternally influenced traits of dairy cattle (e.g., milk yield and age at first calving) typically include direct and maternal effects and. The maternal genetic effects are not important for yield traits of dairy cattle (SCHUTZ et al, 1992; ALBUQUERQUE et al, 1998). ALBUQUERQUE et al (1998) analysis 138,869 lactation records from 68,063 Holstein cows, found that means estimates of the effects of maternal genetic variances and direct maternal covariances, as fractions of phenotypic variances, were 0.008 and 0.007 for milk yield.

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