Issue |
Genet. Sel. Evol.
Volume 33, Number 5, September-October 2001
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Page(s) | 515 - 528 | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/gse:2001130 |
Genet. Sel. Evol. 33 (2001) 515-528
Selection for litter size in pigs. II. Efficiency of closed and open selection lines
Gérard Boleta, Jean-Pierre Bidanelb and Louis Ollivierba Institut national de la recherche agronomique, Station d'amélioration génétique des animaux, 31326 Castanet-Tolosan Cedex, France
b Institut national de la recherche agronomique, Station de génétique quantitative et appliquée, 78352 Jouy-en-Josas Cedex, France
(Received 17 July 2000; accepted 27 April 2001)
Abstract
A selection experiment on litter size in the pig was carried on for
seventeen generations in an Inra experimental herd. The founder
population was made up of 10 males and 120 females from the Large
White breed. Selection was first performed for ten generations in a
closed line, compared to a control line derived from the same founder
population. Selection was carried on within sire family on the total
number of piglets born in the first two litters of the dam (TB1 +
TB2). After ten generations, the selection criterion became dam TB1
only. The control line was then discontinued and a panel of frozen
semen from the 11th generation boars was created for later
comparisons. The selected line was opened to gilt daughters of
hyperprolific boars and sows, at a rate of 1/8 per generation, and the
same selection procedure was applied irrespective of the origin of the
gilt. During the whole experiment, the number of ova shed (OS) and the
number of live embryos (LE) at 30 days in the 3rd pregnancy were
recorded. These two parts of the experiment were analysed using REML
estimation of genetic parameters and a BLUP-Animal Model in order to
estimate the responses to selection. Significant heritabilities for
TB1, TB2, OS and LE were obtained, i.e. 0.10, 0.05, 0.43 and 0.19,
respectively. Significant common environment variances and covariances
were estimated for nearly all traits. Significantly positive BLUP
responses per generation were observed from G0 to G17 for TB1
(+0.086), TB2 (+0.078), OS (+0.197) and LE (+0.157). However,
the responses were 3- to 4-fold higher in the G12-G17 interval
compared to G0-G11, and they were also in fair agreement with
previous estimates based on standard least-squares procedures, using
the control line and the control frozen semen panel. Since G11, the
selection intensity was increased by nearly 80 p. cent compared to the
previous generations, and the proportion of hyperprolific ancestry
increased up to 65 p. cent in the sows of the last generation. The
total genetic gain of about 1.4 piglets at birth per litter could be
shared between a gain due to immigration, of about 0.8 piglets per
litter, and a within-line selection gain of about 0.6 piglets. Thus by
combining selection and immigration in the second part of the
experiment, advantage could be taken from both the genetic superiority
of the immigrants and the higher internal selection intensity made
possible by immigration.
Key words: pigs / selection / litter size / open line / immigration
Correspondence and reprints: Gérard Bolet E-mail: bolet@toulouse.inra.fr
© INRA, EDP Sciences 2001