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Genetic and environmental effects on carcass characteristics of Southdown x Romney lambs: II. Genetic and phenotypic variation
Authors:G L Bennett  D L Johnson  A H Kirton  A H Carter
Institution:Ruakura Animal Research Station, Hamilton, New Zealand.
Abstract:Approximately 4,400 crossbred lambs from Southdown sires and Romney ewes were slaughtered at approximately 18, 23, and 28 wk of age over a 16-yr period. Live weights, carcass measurements, and chemical percentages were analyzed to estimate genetic and phenotypic parameters. Heritabilities of postweaning weights and gains were about .20. Heritabilities of fat and water percentages were about .35 adjusted for age. Heritability of kidney fat percentage was .53. Heritabilities of fat depth and muscle measurements ranged from .21 to .37. Crutch depth (h2 = .73) and cannon bone length (h2 = .74) were the most highly heritable carcass measurements. The genetic correlation between carcass fat and fat-free weight was .47 when lambs were slaughtered at a constant age. Fat-free weight was nearly uncorrelated with percentages of fat, water, and protein when lambs were slaughtered at the same age. Carcass measurements increased accuracy of selection for fat-free weight at a constant age very little compared with using only carcass weight. However, this does not mean that additional measurements are useless. The addition of carcass measurements to the selection criteria would result in correlated responses in chemical composition that more closely resembled direct selection for fat-free weight. Carcass weight would be of little value when used by itself to reduce fat weight adjusted for carcass weight. Direct measurement of carcass composition resulted in 1.6 to 2.6 times more predicted response for reduced fat weight than any combination of carcass weight and one fat depth measurement.
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