New world goat populations are a genetically diverse reservoir for future use

Western hemisphere goats have European, African and Central Asian origins, and some local or rare breeds are reported to be adapted to their environments and economically important. By-in-large these genetic resources have not been quantified. Using 50 K SNP genotypes of 244 animals from 12 goat populations in United States, Costa Rica, Brazil and Argentina, we evaluated the genetic diversity, population structure and selective sweeps documenting goat migration to the “New World”. Our findings suggest the concept of breed, particularly among “locally adapted” breeds, is not a meaningful way to characterize goat populations. The USA Spanish goats were found to be an important genetic reservoir, sharing genomic composition with the wild ancestor and with specialized breeds (e.g. Angora, Lamancha and Saanen). Results suggest goats in the Americas have substantial genetic diversity to use in selection and promote environmental adaptation or product driven specialization. These findings highlight the importance of maintaining goat conservation programs and suggest an awaiting reservoir of genetic diversity for breeding and research while simultaneously discarding concerns about breed designations.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: do Prado Paim, Tiago, Assis Faria, Danielle, Hay, El Hamidi, McManus, Concepta, Lanari, Maria Rosa, Chaverri Esquivel, Laura, Cascante, María Isabel, Jimenez Alfaro, Esteban, Mendez, Argerie, Faco, Olivardo, de Moraes Silva, Kleibe, Mezzadra, Carlos Alberto, Mariante, Arthur, Rezende Paiva, Samuel, Blackburn, Harvey David
Format: info:ar-repo/semantics/artículo biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: Springer Nature 2019-02-06
Subjects:Cabra, Caprinos, Variación Genética, Adaptabilidad, Nannygoats, Goats, Genetic Variation, Adaptability,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/4924
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-38812-3
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-38812-3
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