Inbreeding – lessons from animal breeding, evolutionary biology and conservation genetics
- 1 April 2005
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Animal Science
- Vol. 80 (2) , 121-133
- https://doi.org/10.1079/asc41960121
Abstract
Increased rates of inbreeding are one side effect of breeding programmes designed to give genetic progress for traits of economic importance in livestock. Inbreeding leads to inbreeding depression for traits showing dominance, and will ultimately lead to a decrease in genetic variance within populations. Here we review theoretical and experimental literature from animal breeding, evolutionary biology and conservation genetics on the consequences of inbreeding in terms of trait means and genetic and environmental variance components. The genetic background for these effects is presented and the experimental literature interpreted in relation to them. Furthermore, purging of deleterious alleles and the variable nature of effects of inbreeding on populations are discussed. Based on the literature, we conclude that inbreeding in animal breeding must be controlled very efficiently to maintain long-term sustainable livestock production in the future. The tools to do this efficiently exist, and much can be learnt on inbreeding from the literature in fields only distantly related to animal breeding.Keywords
This publication has 117 references indexed in Scilit:
- The evolutionary and ecological role of heat shock proteinsEcology Letters, 2003
- Hsp90 as a capacitor of phenotypic variationNature, 2002
- The variance in inbreeding depression and the recovery of fitness in bottlenecked populationsProceedings Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1999
- The Distribution of Phenotypic Variance with InbreedingEvolution, 1999
- Purging inbreeding depression and the probability of extinction: full-sib matingHeredity, 1994
- Hereditary Blindness in a Captive Wolf (Canis lupus) Population: Frequency Reduction of a Deleterious Allele in Relation to Gene ConservationConservation Biology, 1993
- Increased Heritable Variation Following Population Bottlenecks: The Role of DominanceEvolution, 1993
- Inbreeding Increases Genetic Variance for Viability in Drosophila melanogasterEvolution, 1989
- Effect of an Experimental Bottleneck on Morphological Integration in the HouseflyEvolution, 1988
- Gene Frequency in Small Populations of Mutant DrosophilaEvolution, 1956