A Genetic Analysis of Maturing Patterns in Straightbred and Crossbred Hereford, Angus and Shorthorn Cattle2
- 1 August 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 43 (2) , 389-395
- https://doi.org/10.2527/jas1976.432389x
Abstract
Relationships among body weights, absolute growth rate (AGR), absolute maturing rate (AMR), relative growth rate (RGR) and degree of maturity of body weight (u) were examined for 208 straightbred and reciprocally crossed Hereford, Angus and Shorthorn cows by 16 Hereford, 17 Angus and 16 Shorthorn sires, u is that fraction of mature weight (adjusted for condition) attained at any age (i.e., u = weight/ mature weight). Heritability of weight and u was respectively .68 and .73 at birth, .59 and .64 at 200 days, .87 and .55 at 396 days, .82 and .21 at 550 days, .41 and —.26 at 3 1/3 yr, and .44 and .40 at puberty. The genetic correlations among weights were large. Heritability of age at puberty was .64 ± .31. The genetic correlation between age and weight at puberty was .67 ± .24. Animals growing most rapidly during the preweaning interval, in absolute terms (AGR) and relative to both current (RGR) and mature weight (AMR), tended to grow more slowly at later ages. Animals more mature at one age were generally more mature at all other ages. Variation in mature weight accounted for only 19% of the genetic variation in u through 550 days. Heritabilities were generally larger for RGR than for AMR. On average, 50% of the variation in AGR was independent of mature weight. Correlations between all measures of growth in the same interval were positive but were generally negative between different intervals. Thus, selection for increased growth rate over any age interval, in either absolute or relative terms, would tend to alter the shape of the growth curve over the interval of selection. However, selection for AGR over any interval would increase weight at all ages, while selection for preweaning RGR would tend to decrease birth weight and weight subsequent to 550 days, but increase 200-, 396- and 550-day weights. Copyright © 1976. American Society of Animal Science . Copyright 1976 by American Society of Animal Science.This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
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