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Showing papers by "University of Veterinary Science published in 2004"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Blood samples of 561 Lipizzan horses from subpopulations (studs) of seven European countries representing a large fraction of the breed's population were used to examine the genetic diversity, population subdivision and gene flow in the breed.
Abstract: Summary Blood samples of 561 Lipizzan horses from subpopulations (studs) of seven European countries representing a large fraction of the breed’s population were used to examine the genetic diversity, population subdivision and gene flow in the breed. DNA analysis based on 18 microsatellite loci revealed that genetic diversity (observed heterozygosity ¼ 0.663, gene diversity ¼ 0.675 and the mean number of alleles ¼ 7.056) in the Lipizzan horse is similar to other horse breeds as well as to other domestic animal species. The genetic differentiation between Lipizzan horses from different studs, although moderate, was apparent (pairwise FST coefficients ranged from 0.021 to 0.080). Complementary findings explaining the genetic relationship among studs were revealed by genetic distance and principal component analysis. One genetic cluster consisted of the subpopulations of Austria, Italy and Slovenia, which represent the classical pool of Lipizzan horse breeding. A second cluster was formed by the Croatian, Hungarian and Slovakian subpopulations. The Romanian subpopulation formed a separate unit. The largest genetic differentiation was found between the Romanian and Italian subpopulation. Genetic results are consistent with the known breeding history of the Lipizzan horse. Correct stud assignment was obtained for 80.9% and 92.1% of Lipizzan horses depending on the inclusion or exclusion of migrant horses, respectively. The results of the present study will be useful for the development of breeding strategies, which consider classical horse breeding as well as recent achievements of population and conservation genetics.

85 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Mares seem to be able to compensate energy losses during lactation mainly by increasing feed intake and not by mobilisation of body fat as shown by constantly lower plasma glucose concentrations in lactating mares.

55 citations