scholarly journals Long-Term Evaluation of Breeding Scheme Alternatives for Endangered Honeybee Subspecies

Insects ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 11 (7) ◽  
pp. 404 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuel Plate ◽  
Richard Bernstein ◽  
Andreas Hoppe ◽  
Kaspar Bienefeld

Modern breeding structures are emerging for European honeybee populations. However, while genetic evaluations of honeybees are becoming increasingly well understood, little is known about how selection decisions shape the populations’ genetic structures. We performed simulations evaluating 100 different selection schemes, defined by selection rates for dams and sires, in populations of 200, 500, or 1000 colonies per year and considering four different quantitative traits, reflecting different genetic parameters and numbers of influential loci. Focusing on sustainability, we evaluated genetic progress over 100 years and related it to inbreeding developments. While all populations allowed for sustainable breeding with generational inbreeding rates below 1% per generation, optimal selection rates differed and sustainable selection was harder to achieve in smaller populations and for stronger negative correlations of maternal and direct effects in the selection trait. In small populations, a third or a fourth of all candidate queens should be selected as dams, whereas this number declined to a sixth for larger population sizes. Furthermore, our simulations indicated that, particularly in small populations, as many sires as possible should be provided. We conclude that carefully applied breeding provides good prospects for currently endangered honeybee subspecies, since sustainable genetic progress improves their attractiveness to beekeepers.

1996 ◽  
Vol 1996 ◽  
pp. 115-115
Author(s):  
B Grundy ◽  
B Villanueva ◽  
J A Woolliams

The concept of long term contributions was devised by Wray and Thompson (1990) to describe the accumulation of inbreeding in a population under selection, and further developed by Woolliams and Thompson (1994) to describe genetic progress. This study describes a method to utilise these relationships for optimising schemes where the breeding objective is cumulative net response with restrictions on inbreeding. The selection decisions at a given generation can be obtained from maximising the function f(x) of accumulated gain corrected for squared contributions: f(x) = xTg-λTAx, where x is the vector of long term contributions, g is the vector of estimated breeding values, A is the matrix of genetic relationships which has not been corrected for reduced Mendelian variance with inbreeding (unlike the method of Wray and Goddard, 1994), and λ is a constant taking positive values.


1996 ◽  
Vol 1996 ◽  
pp. 115-115
Author(s):  
B Grundy ◽  
B Villanueva ◽  
J A Woolliams

The concept of long term contributions was devised by Wray and Thompson (1990) to describe the accumulation of inbreeding in a population under selection, and further developed by Woolliams and Thompson (1994) to describe genetic progress. This study describes a method to utilise these relationships for optimising schemes where the breeding objective is cumulative net response with restrictions on inbreeding. The selection decisions at a given generation can be obtained from maximising the function f(x) of accumulated gain corrected for squared contributions: f(x) = xTg-λTAx, where x is the vector of long term contributions, g is the vector of estimated breeding values, A is the matrix of genetic relationships which has not been corrected for reduced Mendelian variance with inbreeding (unlike the method of Wray and Goddard, 1994), and λ is a constant taking positive values.


2019 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Eugenia Allegra ◽  
Ignazio La Mantia ◽  
Maria R. Bianco ◽  
Nicolò Marino ◽  
Alessio Fallica ◽  
...  

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