Term
2 properties of a trait of economic importance in a population |
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Definition
1: heritability 2: phenotypic variability |
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Term
when genetic improvement is almost impossible |
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Definition
When a trait is not heritable or has no variability |
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Term
2 ways a breeder can change a population |
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Definition
1. Choice of individuals used as parents through artificial selection. 2. Control the way by which parents are mated (mating plan). |
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Term
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Definition
Choice of individuals used as parents |
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Term
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Definition
Controlling the way by which parents are mated |
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Term
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Definition
The genetic change due to selection |
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Term
Response to selection (R) |
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Definition
the difference in mean phenotypic value between offspring of the selected parents and the whole parental generation before selection. |
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Term
Selection differential (S) |
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Definition
the mean value of the selected individuals selected as parents expressed as a deviation from the population mean. |
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Term
how to calculate Response to selection (R) |
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Definition
R = h2 * S
h2 = heritability
S = Selection differential |
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Term
The selection differential can be predicted in advance when these 2 conditions are met |
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Definition
1: The phenotypic value of the trait under selection is normally distributed. 2: Selection is by truncation. |
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Term
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Definition
individuals being chosen strictly in order of merit as judged by their phenotypic values |
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Term
under the previously mentioned conditions, selection differential depends on... |
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Definition
1: The proportion of the population selected, p
2: The phenotypic standard deviation of the trait, σp |
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Term
standardized selection differential |
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Definition
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Term
how to calculate intensity of selection (i) |
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Definition
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Term
how to calculate Response to selection (R) when intensity of selection is factored in |
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Definition
R = i h2 σP
or
R = i h σA
or
R = (i h σA) / L
h = accuracy of selection
L = generation interval |
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Term
Response to Selection depends on |
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Definition
1. Selection Intensity 2. Heritability of the Trait 3. Variability in the Trait |
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Term
sources of correlation among traits |
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Definition
-genetic factors -environmental factors |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
genetic cause of correlation |
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Definition
mostly pleiotropic property of genes |
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Term
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Definition
propensity of a gene to affect more than one trait |
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Term
when the environment causes correlation among traits |
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Definition
when two traits are influenced by the same differences in environmental conditions |
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Term
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Definition
response to the selection of a particular trait, such as trait X |
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Term
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Definition
the changes you observe on a trait other than the one you selected for; in this case, observed for trait Y when you selected for trait X. it can go the other way around as well. |
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Term
how to calculate direct response |
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Definition
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Term
how to calculate correlated response |
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Definition
CRY = i hX hY rg σPY
rg = genetic correlation between traits X and Y |
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Term
Advantages of Indirect Selection |
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Definition
1: Trait X is cheaper and easier to measure 2: Trait X can be measured earlier in life 3: Trait Y is sex-limited, but trait X can be measured in both sexes. 4: A typical example would be carcass trait. |
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Term
some things to be considered in the optimization of a breeding program |
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Definition
-genetic variance -accuracy of selection -intensity of selection -generation interval -population size |
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Term
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Definition
selection causing reduction of additive genetic variance in the parents |
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Term
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Definition
the correlation between the selection criteria and the true breeding value for the breeding goal that is to be improved |
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Term
when selection intensity is directly related to the number of animals selected |
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Definition
When the distribution of a trait is normal and selection is by truncation |
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Term
selection intensity vs. response to selection |
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Definition
increased selection intensity improves response to selection |
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Term
selection intensity can be limited by |
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Definition
1: reproductive capacity of the selected individuals 2: population size 3: inbreeding |
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Term
selection intensity vs. effective population size |
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Definition
greater intensity leads to smaller effective population size |
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Term
accuracy of selection vs. effective population size |
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Definition
greater accuracy of selection reduces effective population size due to relatives being selected |
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Term
Most selection schemes aim at... |
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Definition
optimizing the factors that affect rate of genetic gain |
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Term
The objective in optimized breeding strategies needs to be... |
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Definition
maximizing genetic gain while restricting inbreeding |
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Term
The factors that affect annual response to selection |
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Definition
-genetic variance -accuracy of selection -intensity of selection -generation interval -population size |
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Term
what increasing selection intensity does for inbreeding |
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Definition
leads to rapid genetic gains, but also increases inbreeding |
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Term
disadvantage of selecting young animals |
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Definition
they have less information available |
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Term
To optimize long term selection, it is useful to... |
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Definition
combine selection on BLUP EBV with some restriction on the average relatedness of the selected animals |
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Term
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Definition
Best Linear Unbiased Prediction of breeding value |
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Term
Selection by definition implies... |
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Definition
lack of opportunity for all members of the population to mate |
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Term
Non-random mating leads to... |
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Definition
disequilibrium (non-random association of alleles) |
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Term
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Definition
non-random association of alleles |
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Term
effect of disequilibrium (non-random association of alleles) |
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Definition
reduces the genetic variance |
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Term
how to calculate theoretical maximum response (Rmax) |
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Definition
Rmax = 2Neih2σp
Ne = effective population size |
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Term
some factors that affect long term selection limits |
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Definition
-Disequilibrium -Inbreeding (genetic drift) -Natural Selection -Number of loci -Physiological constraints |
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Term
some natural selection factors that can affect long term selection limits |
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Definition
-Fertility -Selection differential -Favoring heterozygotes |
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Term
selection limit can be broken by... |
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Definition
-Relaxing selection followed by selection -Mutations to generate “new” additive genetic variation |
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Term
how the poultry industry maintains its populations |
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Definition
-Primary breeders maintain large populations in replicates -Primary breeders limit the level of inbreeding per generation -Geneticists practice multi-trait selection with different weights on different traits. -Industrial lines can also benefit for mutations |
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Term
advantage of multi-trait selection |
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Definition
it does not exhaust genetic variance as much as selecting on a single trait
This can potentially ensure existence of genetic variation for many generations to come. |
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