Genetic studies of South Australian Merino sheep. 3. Heritabilities of various wool and body traits

1982 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 355 ◽  
Author(s):  
IP Gregory

Heritabilities have been estimated for a large number of quantitative and qualitative wool and body traits recorded on two flocks of South Australian Merino sheep over a 12-year period. Data were unadjusted for fixed environmental effects and so the estimates are applicable to the heterogeneous populations found in most practical situations. Dam-offspring heritabilities of quantitative traits ranged from 0.15 for primary follicle number to 0.63 for body weight. Greasy and clean fleece weights, percentage clean yield, staple length, crimps per inch, fibre diameter, secondary and total follicle number, skin thickness, coefficient of variation of fibre diameter and secondary/primary follicle ratio had moderate to high heritabilities. Dam-offspring heritabilities of qualitative traits ranged from 0.12 for weather damage of the fleece to 0.75 for birthcoat. Total folds, face cover and hocks had high heritabilities, and wool character, type of staple formation and wool quality had moderate heritabilities. The main production traits (body weight, greasy fleece weight, yield, clean fleece weight, staple length, fibre diameter and total follicle number) were corrected for variation due to type of birth and age of dam and their heritabilities re-estimated. No change occurred in the half-sib heritabilities; dam-offspring heritabilities increased by an average of 0.05.

1970 ◽  
Vol 21 (3) ◽  
pp. 541 ◽  
Author(s):  
O Mayo ◽  
DW Cooper ◽  
RE Brady ◽  
CW Hooper

The associations between 10 production characters and fertility at the R blood group, haemoglobin, and transferrin loci have been examined in two flocks of South Australian Merino sheep. The production characters were birth weight, hogget body weight, hogget wrinkle score, greasy fleece weight, clean fleece weight, staple length, degree of crimp, fibre diameter, fleece density, and skin thickness. No evidence of any real association was found. The significant associations which were found are ascribed either to chance or to the impossibility of eliminating sire effects from the analysis.


1981 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 657 ◽  
Author(s):  
IP Gregory ◽  
RW Ponzoni

The effects of years, sex, type of birth (i.e. whether or not multiple birth) and age of dam on 26 wool and body traits of South Australian Merino sheep were estimated by least-squares analysis. Years and sex had highly significant effects on all traits. Of the main production traits, type of birth had a significant effect on body weight, greasy and clean fleece weight and total wool follicle number, while age of dam only had a significant effect on body weight and greasy fleece weight. The possible consequences of failing to correct body weight and greasy and clean fleece weights for type of birth and age of dam were considered and it was concluded that, although in some years correction of these traits may not be warranted, in other years correction may be necessary to prevent selection against fecundity and an increase in the generation interval. The main components contributing to the 6.0 % difference between fleece weights of singles and twins were surface area, total follicle number and wrinkle score. The difference between fleece weights of animals from older ewes and animals from maidens was only 1.5 %; surface area was the main contributor to this deviation.


1960 ◽  
Vol 11 (4) ◽  
pp. 604 ◽  
Author(s):  
SSY Young ◽  
Turner H Newton ◽  
CHS Dolling

Heritability estimates were calculated for 10 traits in rams and ewes of a medium-woolled strain of Australian Merino sheep. The traits were greasy wool weight, clean scoured yield, clean wool weight, body weight, wrinkle score, face cover score, fibre population density, fibre diameter, staple length, and crimps per inch. Estimates were made by dam-offspring correlations, measurement on the dams being at 15-16 months, on daughters at 15-16 months, and on sons at both 10-12 and 15-16 months. All estimates for both sexes lay between 0.3 and 0.6, except for fibre population density (0.24) and fibre diameter (0.12) in rams at 15-16 months and for clean wool weight (0.29) and face cover score (0.29) in rams at 10-12 months. The only significant sex difference lay in the lower figure for fibre diameter in rams at 15-16 months, but this is of doubtful importance as the corresponding figure for rams at 10-12 months (0.37) did not differ significantly from the ewe figure. All traits may be considered highly heritable, and the high values for the yearling rams indicate that consideration might be given to the selection of rams for production traits at an earlier age than the traditional one of 18 months or older.


1982 ◽  
Vol 33 (2) ◽  
pp. 363 ◽  
Author(s):  
IP Gregory

Genetic, phenotypic and environmental correlations were estimated between 23 quantitative and qualitative wool and body traits of South Australian Merino sheep. Clean fleece weight was significantly correlated genetically with greasy fleece weight (0.62), yield (0.47), staple length (0.41), crimps per inch (-0.34), secondary/primary follicle ratio (0.37) and skin thickness (0.39). No significant half-sib genetic correlation was found between clean fleece weight and fibre diameter and the dam-offspring correlation was quite low, although significant (0.16, P < 0.05). This indicates that selection for clean fleece weight should not lead to any great increase in fibre diameter. Skin thickness is discussed as a possible early indicator of clean fleece weight.


1958 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 567 ◽  
Author(s):  
PG Schinckel

Variability of the lamb birthcoat has been studied in relation to adult fleece characteristics. Coarse birthcoats were associated with increased variability of fibre diameter and decreased crimp rate. The increased variability of fibre diameter resulted from a significant increase in the diameter of primary fibres and a small, but statistically non-significant, decrease in the diameter of secondary fibres. There was no relation between birthcoat grade and body weight, clean fleece weight, yield, staple length, follicle density, follicle ratio, mean fibre diameter, or skin folds. It is postulated that there is a gene system in the Merino the effect of which is to cause variation in the amount of wool produced by the different follicle types. Increased "dosage" of genes of the system endows primary follicles with increased productivity and secondary follicles with decreased productivity. This is expressed in the form of increased halo-hair abundance in the lamb and increased differences between the diameters of primary and secondary fibres in the adult.


1972 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 75-84 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. L. Ryder ◽  
D. T. Wilson

SUMMARY1. Fleece characteristics in Finnish Landrace × Merino and Merino × Finnish Landrace sheep were compared with those of the parental breeds, and although most characters in the crossbreds showed no significant departure from the parental mean, they had similarities to the Merino which imparted commercial value.2. The wool was mostly of 60s quality compared with 58s in the Finnish Landrace, and 64s and over in the Merino parents. Crimp number showed heterosis, being 5 to 6 per cm in the crossbreds compared with 2 in the Finnish sheep and 7 in the Merino.3. The mean fleece weight was 3-5 kg, compared with 2-2 kg in the Finnish sheep and 4-2 kg in the Merino.4. The mean staple length was 13 cm compared with a very variable length around a mean of 16 cm in the Finnish Landrace, and 10 cm in the Merino.5. The fibre diameter was nearer to that of the Merino, but not significantly so (primary mean 29·2 μ, secondary mean 26·6 μ).6. The greater fleece weight of the crossbreds would be expected to be associated with a greater skin follicle density, but they had a secondary/primary follicle ratio of about 10 (compared with 5 in the Finnish Landrace and 20 in the Merino), which did not differ significantly from the parental mean.7. There was some evidence that fibre development was initially more rapid in the crossbred lambs.


2007 ◽  
Vol 58 (2) ◽  
pp. 177 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Safari ◽  
N. M. Fogarty ◽  
A. R. Gilmour ◽  
K. D. Atkins ◽  
S. I. Mortimer ◽  
...  

Precise estimates of genetic parameters are required for genetic evaluation systems. This study combined data from 7 research resource flocks across Australia to estimate variance components and genetic parameters for production traits in the Australian Merino sheep. The flocks were maintained for several generations and represented contemporary Australian Merino fine, medium, and broad wool bloodlines over the past 30 years. Over 110 000 records were available for analysis for each of the major wool traits, and 50 000 records for reproduction and growth traits with over 2700 sires and 25 000 dams. A linear mixed animal model was used to analyse 6 wool traits comprising clean fleece weight (CFW), greasy fleece weight (GFW), fibre diameter (FD), yield (YLD), coefficient of variation of fibre diameter (CVFD), and standard deviation of fibre diameter (SDFD), 4 growth traits comprising birth weight (BWT), weaning weight (WWT), yearling weight (YWT), and hogget weight (HWT), and 4 reproduction traits comprising fertility (FER), litter size (LS), lambs born per ewe joined (LB/EJ), and lambs weaned per ewe joined (LW/EJ). The range of direct heritability estimates for the wool traits was 0.42 ± 0.01 for CFW to 0.68 ± 0.01 for FD. For growth traits the range was 0.18 ± 0.01 for BWT to 0.38 ± 0.01 for HWT, and for reproduction traits 0.045 ± 0.01 for FER to 0.074 ± 0.01 for LS. Significant maternal effects were found for wool and growth, but not reproduction traits. There was significant covariance between direct and maternal genetic effects for all wool and growth traits except for YWT. The correlations between direct and maternal effects ranged from –0.60 ± 0.02 for GFW to –0.21 ± 0.10 for SDFD in the wool traits and from –0.21 ± 0.03 for WWT to 0.25 ± 0.08 for HWT in the growth traits. Litter effects were significant for all wool and growth traits and only for LS in reproduction traits. The mating sire was fitted in the models for reproduction traits and this variance component accounted for 21, 17, and 8% of the total phenotypic variation for FER, LB/EJ, and LW/EJ, respectively. The implications of additional significant variance components for the estimation of heritability are discussed.


1983 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 449-454
Author(s):  
R. Gonzàlez ◽  
A. Lombardini ◽  
W. Ibañez

ABSTRACTMedium-wool Australian Merino rams were sampled in 1978 and 1979 to estimate the relationships between the follicle curvature score, fleece and body characteristics.As a high correlation coefficient between two independent observers was found in both years, only one observer was used to correlate follicle curvature score with wool production.Repeatability of the follicle score between lambs at weaning and 14- to 15-month-old rams was 0·61*** and 0·65***.Clean fleece weight was significantly correlated with greasy fleece weight (0·8***, 0·9***), clean scoured yield (0·6***, 0·7***), staple length (0·4*, 0·5**) and crimps per cm (-0·3, -0·4*), but the correlation was very low with fibre diameter (0·01, 0·06).The correlation of clean fleece weight with body weight at 14 to 15 months varied between 0·2 and 0·5 (P < 0·001).Follicle curvature score was significantly correlated with clean fleece weight (-0·5**), clean scoured yield (0·6***, 0·7***), staple length (-0·4*, -0·7***), fibre diameter (0·3, 0·6***) and crimps per cm (0·4*. 0·6***). Non-significant correlations of follicle curvature score with greasy fleece weight (–0·2) and body weight at 14 to 15 months (–0·04, –0·1) were found.Depending on whether the proportion of superior 14- to 15-month-old rams which are to be retained for breeding is 0·10 or 0·05, then, according to our data, the proportion of lambs that can be culled at weaning (with an accuracy of P < 0·05) is 0·31 or 0·42, respectively.


1989 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 433 ◽  
Author(s):  
SI Mortimer ◽  
KD Atkins

Wool production traits were measured on Merino hogget ewes in an unselected multiple-bloodline flock over a 7-year period at Trangie Agricultural Research Centre, N.S.W. The traits measured were greasy fleece weight (GFW), skirted fleece weight (SKFW), yield (Y), clean fleece weight (CFW), fibre diameter (FD), body weight (BWT) and staple length (SL). These measurements were used to examine genetic differences between and within flocks of Merino sheep, and to estimate heritability of and genetic and phenotypic correlations among these traits. Significant strain, flock within strain and flock effects were present for all traits. Interactions between these effects and year were non-significant. Within-flock genetic variance was always larger than between-flock within strain genetic variance for each trait. The influence of environmental effects on these traits was also examined. The environmental effects of birth-rearing type, age at observation and age of dam together accounted for about 7-10% of the total within-flock variation in fleece weights and body weight.After adjusting for significant environmental effects, paternal half-sib heritability estimates were 0.29 �. 0.06 for GFW, 0.22 � 0.05 for SKFW, 0.35 � 0.05 for Y, 0.30 �0.06 for CFW, 0.48 �0.07 for FD, 0.34 �. 0.06 for BWT and 0.44 �0.07 for SL. Estimates for genetic and phenotypic correlations were in agreement with published estimates except for the genetic correlation between CFW and FD (0.40 �. 0.11), and the genetic correlations involving BWT, which were essentially zero. The implications of the results of this study for the genetic improvement of Merino sheep for wool production are discussed.


1966 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. A. Vesely ◽  
H. F. Peters ◽  
S. B. Slen

Rambouillet, Romnelet, Columbia, Targhee, and Suffolk sheep were evaluated under range conditions for the production of lamb and wool in the period 1960–1963. The production traits analyzed were: birth and weaning weight; face cover and neck wrinkling; fertility, prolificacy, weaned lamb production, and body weight of ewe; lamb survival to weaning; grease and clean fleece weight, staple length, wool grade, and percentage yield of clean wool by yearling and mature ewes.Lambs of Romnelet were lighter at birth than those of the other breeds. Targhee and Suffolk were the heaviest at birth. Romnelet and Columbia lambs were lighter at weaning than those of Rambouillet, Targhee, and Suffolk.Fertility, prolificacy, and weaned lamb production were essentially the same in the four range breeds. Suffolk produced more weaned lamb than the other four breeds. There were no breed differences in the survival of lambs.Columbia exceeded all other breeds in production of grease and clean fleece weight. Suffolk produced the smallest amount of wool. Staple length of Columbia ewes was 4.3, 7.5, 18.6, 23.7 mm longer than that of Romnelet, Targhee, Suffolk, and Rambouillet ewes.


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