Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya

The aim of this article was to study opportunities for improvement of the indigenous and threatened Red Maasai sheep (RM) in Kenya, by comparing purebreeding with crossbreeding with Dorper sheep (D) as a terminal breed, in two different environments (Env. A and a harsher Env. B), assuming different levels of genotype-by-environment interaction (G × E). Breeding goals differed between environments and breeds. Four scenarios of nucleus breeding schemes were stochastically simulated, with the nucleus in Env. A. Overall, results showed an increase in carcass weight produced per ewe by more than 10% over 15 years. Genetic gain in carcass weight was 0.17 genetic SD/year (0.2 kg/year) across scenarios for RM in the less harsh Env. A. For survival and milk yield, the gain was lower (0.04–0.05 genetic SD/year). With stronger G × E, the gain in the commercial tier for RM in the harsher Env. B became increasingly lower. Selection of females also within the commercial tier gave slightly higher genetic gain. The scenario with purebreeding of RM and a subnucleus in Env. B gave the highest total income and quantity of meat. However, quantity of meat in Env. A increased slightly from having crossbreeding with D, whereas that in Env. B decreased. A simple and well-designed nucleus breeding programme would increase the genetic potential of RM. Crossbreeding of RM with D is not recommended for harsh environmental conditions due to the large breed differences expected in that environment.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zonabend König, Emelie, Strandberg, E., Ojango, Julie M.K., Mirkena, T., Okeyo Mwai, Ally, Philipsson, J.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2017-12
Subjects:sheep, animal breeding, small ruminants,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89912
https://doi.org/10.1111/jbg.12260
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-899122023-03-18T06:46:51Z Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya Zonabend König, Emelie Strandberg, E. Ojango, Julie M.K. Mirkena, T. Okeyo Mwai, Ally Philipsson, J. sheep animal breeding small ruminants The aim of this article was to study opportunities for improvement of the indigenous and threatened Red Maasai sheep (RM) in Kenya, by comparing purebreeding with crossbreeding with Dorper sheep (D) as a terminal breed, in two different environments (Env. A and a harsher Env. B), assuming different levels of genotype-by-environment interaction (G × E). Breeding goals differed between environments and breeds. Four scenarios of nucleus breeding schemes were stochastically simulated, with the nucleus in Env. A. Overall, results showed an increase in carcass weight produced per ewe by more than 10% over 15 years. Genetic gain in carcass weight was 0.17 genetic SD/year (0.2 kg/year) across scenarios for RM in the less harsh Env. A. For survival and milk yield, the gain was lower (0.04–0.05 genetic SD/year). With stronger G × E, the gain in the commercial tier for RM in the harsher Env. B became increasingly lower. Selection of females also within the commercial tier gave slightly higher genetic gain. The scenario with purebreeding of RM and a subnucleus in Env. B gave the highest total income and quantity of meat. However, quantity of meat in Env. A increased slightly from having crossbreeding with D, whereas that in Env. B decreased. A simple and well-designed nucleus breeding programme would increase the genetic potential of RM. Crossbreeding of RM with D is not recommended for harsh environmental conditions due to the large breed differences expected in that environment. 2017-12 2018-01-03T16:36:26Z 2018-01-03T16:36:26Z Journal Article Zonabend Konig, E., Strandberg, E., Ojango, J.M.K., Mirkena, T., Okeya, A.M. and Philipsson, J. 2017. Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya. Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics 134(6):531–544. 1439-0388 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89912 https://doi.org/10.1111/jbg.12260 en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access p. 531-544 Wiley Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic sheep
animal breeding
small ruminants
sheep
animal breeding
small ruminants
spellingShingle sheep
animal breeding
small ruminants
sheep
animal breeding
small ruminants
Zonabend König, Emelie
Strandberg, E.
Ojango, Julie M.K.
Mirkena, T.
Okeyo Mwai, Ally
Philipsson, J.
Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya
description The aim of this article was to study opportunities for improvement of the indigenous and threatened Red Maasai sheep (RM) in Kenya, by comparing purebreeding with crossbreeding with Dorper sheep (D) as a terminal breed, in two different environments (Env. A and a harsher Env. B), assuming different levels of genotype-by-environment interaction (G × E). Breeding goals differed between environments and breeds. Four scenarios of nucleus breeding schemes were stochastically simulated, with the nucleus in Env. A. Overall, results showed an increase in carcass weight produced per ewe by more than 10% over 15 years. Genetic gain in carcass weight was 0.17 genetic SD/year (0.2 kg/year) across scenarios for RM in the less harsh Env. A. For survival and milk yield, the gain was lower (0.04–0.05 genetic SD/year). With stronger G × E, the gain in the commercial tier for RM in the harsher Env. B became increasingly lower. Selection of females also within the commercial tier gave slightly higher genetic gain. The scenario with purebreeding of RM and a subnucleus in Env. B gave the highest total income and quantity of meat. However, quantity of meat in Env. A increased slightly from having crossbreeding with D, whereas that in Env. B decreased. A simple and well-designed nucleus breeding programme would increase the genetic potential of RM. Crossbreeding of RM with D is not recommended for harsh environmental conditions due to the large breed differences expected in that environment.
format Journal Article
topic_facet sheep
animal breeding
small ruminants
author Zonabend König, Emelie
Strandberg, E.
Ojango, Julie M.K.
Mirkena, T.
Okeyo Mwai, Ally
Philipsson, J.
author_facet Zonabend König, Emelie
Strandberg, E.
Ojango, Julie M.K.
Mirkena, T.
Okeyo Mwai, Ally
Philipsson, J.
author_sort Zonabend König, Emelie
title Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya
title_short Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya
title_full Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya
title_fullStr Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Purebreeding of Red Maasai and crossbreeding with Dorper sheep in different environments in Kenya
title_sort purebreeding of red maasai and crossbreeding with dorper sheep in different environments in kenya
publisher Wiley
publishDate 2017-12
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/89912
https://doi.org/10.1111/jbg.12260
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