Abstract
This paper describes the estimation of genetic changes in farm livestock using field data. The method proposed depends on a difference in rate of change in performance of the population and of the successive progenies of individual sires. The change in the population with time is taken as t+g, where t represents environmental change and g represents genetic change, while the within-sire change is taken as tg. Their difference measures half the genetic change.This principle can be applied, with certain precautions, tofielddata where there is some spread of sires over time. The method has two advantages over other methods in that past as well as current changes can be measured and no additional facilities are required. However, selection among sires may bias the estimates of genetic change. Approximate sampling errors of the estimates of change can be obtained and hence the rate of genetic change which a certain body of data will demonstrate to be significant can be estimated.The method was applied to a set of pig records collected over nine years by a private pig breeder. There was considerable change with time in all six traits examined and in at least three of them there appeared to have been a substantial genetic change accounting for the whole of the observed change.

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