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Genetic variation and prediction of additive and nonadditive genetic effects for six carcass traits in an Angus-Brahman multibreed herd

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TLDR
Selection for carcass traits within desirable (narrow) ranges and slaughter of steers at similar compositional end point seems to be a good combination to help produce meat products of consistent quality.
Abstract
Estimates of covariances and sire expected progeny differences of additive and nonaddi- tive genetic effects for six carcass traits were obtained using records from 486 straightbred and crossbred steers from 121 sires born between 1989 and 1995 in the Angus-Brahman multibreed herd of the University of Florida Steers were slaughtered at a similar carcass composition end point Covariances were estimated by REML procedures, using a generalized expectation-maximization algorithm applied to mul- tibreed populations Straightbred and crossbred esti- mates of heritabilities and additive genetic correla- tions were within ranges found in the literature for steers slaughtered on an age- or weight-constant basis for hot carcass weight, longissimus muscle area, and shear force but equal to or less than the lower bound of these ranges for fat-related traits Maximum values of interactibilities (ie, ratios of nonadditive variances to phenotypic variances in the F1) and nonadditive genetic correlations were smaller than heritabilities and additive genetic correlations in straightbreds and crossbred groups Sire additive and total direct genetic predictions for longissimus muscle area, marbling, and shear force tended to decrease with the fraction of Brahman alleles, whereas those for hot carcass weight and fat thickness over the longissimus were higher, and those for kidney fat were lower in straightbreds and F1 than in other crossbred groups Nonadditive genetic predictions were similar across sire groups of all Angus and Brahman fractions These results suggest that slaughtering steers on a similar carcass composition basis reduces variability of fat-related traits while retaining variability for non-fat-related traits comparable to slaughtering steers on a similar age or weight basis Selection for carcass traits within desirable (narrow) ranges and slaughter of steers at similar compositional end point seems to be a good combination to help produce meat products of consis- tent quality

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Journal Article

Heritability estimates for carcass traits of cattle: a review.

TL;DR: Heritability estimates for several carcass traits are sensitive to the covariate included in the model for the end point, implying that direct response to selection would be different for some traits depending on slaughter end point.
Journal ArticleDOI

Quantitative and molecular genetic influences on properties of beef: a review

TL;DR: Genome-wide screening of DNA markers indicates a number of putative Quantitative Trait Loci (QTL) associated with carcass and meat quality characteristics, and the possibility exists that significant mitochondrial genetic effects occur for some carcASS and beef quality attributes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimated genetic parameters for carcass traits of Brahman cattle.

TL;DR: Results indicate that sufficient genetic variation exists within the Brahman breed for design and implementation of effective selection programs for important carcass quality and yield traits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic parameters for growth and carcass traits of Brahman steers.

TL;DR: The magnitude of heritability estimates suggests that improvement in carcass yield, carcass quality, and consumer acceptance traits can be made within the Brahman population.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimated genetic parameters for palatability traits of steaks from Brahman cattle

TL;DR: Results indicated that improvement in tenderness based on selection for favorable shear force, sensory panel tenderness, or calpastatin activity would be slow; therefore, postslaughter intervention programs should also be considered.
References
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Maximum Likelihood Approaches to Variance Component Estimation and to Related Problems

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a restricted maximum likelihood (reml) approach which takes into account the loss in degrees of freedom resulting from estimating fixed effects, and developed a satisfactory asymptotic theory for estimators of variance components.
Journal ArticleDOI

Breed differences and genetic parameters for body composition traits in beef cattle.

TL;DR: Breed differences and genetic parameters for carcass traits in beef cattle were reviewed, suggesting good potential for accurate genetic selection for a given individual carcass characteristic and the use of terminal breeding systems with complementary sire and dam genetic types.
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