Corrigendum - Response to selection in Australian Merino sheep. II. Estimates of phenotypic and genetic parameters for some production traits in Merino ewes and an analysis of the possible effects of selection on them
- 1 January 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by CSIRO Publishing in Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
- Vol. 19 (2) , 303-+
- https://doi.org/10.1071/ar9680303c
Abstract
Estimates of heritabilities and of phenotypic and genetic correlations are given, based on extensive measurements on medium Peppin Merino ewes at 15–16 months of age. In general these substantiate results obtained by other workers and, in particular, confirm the high heritabilities of the traits measured. An effort has been made to try to detect possible changes in additive genetic variance for the trait under selection (clean wool weight). Estimates are obtained for data from animals at different stages of selection: (A) either unselected, or with little selection history, and (B and C) with varying amounts of selection. For stage A data the average estimated additive genetic variance was 0.31. There are problems involved in estimating from stage (B+C) data but an upper limit average value of 0.22 was obtained. Thus, although a decrease in additive genetic variance has occurred, its statistical significance is unknown and conclusions about the decrease must necessarily be tentative. In practically all cases the estimates of phenotypic and genetic correlations are of the same order of magnitude, and for the genetic correlations may be summarized as: See PDFAll other combinations of traits have negligible genetic correlations (in the range –0.20 to + 0.2).Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Response to selection in Australian Merino sheep. I. Selection for high clean wool weight, with a ceiling on fibre diameter and degree of skin wrinkle. Response in wool and body characteristicsAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1968
- Efficiency of conversion of food to wool at two nutritional levels by three merino strainsAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1966
- Vital statistics for an experimental flock of Merino sheep. III. Factors affecting wool and body characteristics, including the effect of age of ewe and its possible interaction with method of selectionAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1966
- Relative Efficiencies of Heritability Estimates Based on Regression of Offspring on ParentBiometrics, 1961
- Efficiency of conversion of food to wool. 2. Comparison of the efficiency of the same Merino ewes on two different rationsAustralian Journal of Agricultural Research, 1961
- The Estimation of Heritability by Regression of Offspring on ParentPublished by JSTOR ,1953