Journal article
Divergent genotypes for fatness or residual feed intake in Angus cattle. 2. Body composition but not reproduction was affected in first-parity cows on both low and high levels of nutrition
Animal Production Science, Vol.58(1), pp.43-54
2016
Abstract
This paper reports a subset of results from the Beef Cooperative Research Centre-funded Maternal Productivity Project. This research aimed to describe the response of Angus cows of different and divergent genotypes to variable nutritional environments over five breeding seasons. Cows selected for a divergence in either fat depth (HFat vs LFat) or residual feed intake (RFI: HRFI vs LRFI) based on mid-parent estimated breeding values (EBV) for those traits were allocated in replicate groups to either high or low nutritional treatments at two different sites, namely the Vasse Research Centre in Western Australia and the Struan Research Centre in South Australia. The traits reported in this paper include output traits (birth and weaning weight of calves, liveweight change of cows), change traits (change in Rib Fat, P8 fat, eye muscle area and liveweight between specified time points) and reproductive traits [pregnancy rates, percentage calves born alive and days to calving at the days to calving at the second calving opportunity (DC2)]. Having had their first calf, the vulnerability of these young cows to nutritional restriction and how it may adversely affect rebreeding was examined. HFat and HRFI cows were fatter, heavier and had greater eye muscle area than LFat and LRFI, respectively, at all times during the breeding cycle on both levels of nutrition. There was no difference in either days-to-calving or pregnancy rates after the second mating between genotypes. Equally, nutritional treatment had no effect on these traits in this cohort of cows. There was evidence for an implied genetic correlation between Rib Fat EBV, DC2 and pregnancy rates of –0.38 that suggests that selection for leanness may result in reduced fertility of the herd but the effect was not significant herein. As long as producers record the phenotype for both traits and select cows with favourable DC2 as well as low fatness, these problems can be avoided, owing to only 22% of variation in pregnancy rates being explained by DC2 and Rib Fat EBV. Producers can largely be confident that selection for leanness, or increased feed efficiency, has little impact on productivity as long as cows are in adequate body condition to remain healthy and productive.
Details
- Title
- Divergent genotypes for fatness or residual feed intake in Angus cattle. 2. Body composition but not reproduction was affected in first-parity cows on both low and high levels of nutrition
- Authors/Creators
- M. Laurence (Author/Creator) - Murdoch UniversityJ.M. Accioly (Author/Creator) - Cooperative Research Centre for Beef Genetic TechnologiesK.J. Copping (Author/Creator) - South Australian Research and Development InstituteM.P.B. Deland (Author/Creator) - South Australian Research and Development InstituteJ F. Graham (Author/Creator) - Cooperative Research Centre for Beef Genetic TechnologiesM.L. Hebart (Author/Creator) - Cooperative Research Centre for Beef Genetic TechnologiesR.M. Herd (Author/Creator) - Cooperative Research Centre for Beef Genetic TechnologiesF.M. Jones (Author/Creator) - Cooperative Research Centre for Beef Genetic TechnologiesS.J. Lee (Author/Creator) - The University of AdelaideE.J. Speijers (Author/Creator) - Cooperative Research Centre for Beef Genetic TechnologiesW.S. Pitchford (Author/Creator) - The University of Adelaide
- Publication Details
- Animal Production Science, Vol.58(1), pp.43-54
- Publisher
- CSIRO Publishing
- Identifiers
- 991005541346007891
- Copyright
- © 2017 CSIRO
- Murdoch Affiliation
- School of Veterinary and Life Sciences
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article
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- Collaboration types
- Domestic collaboration
- Citation topics
- 3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
- 3.51 Dairy & Animal Sciences
- 3.51.115 Livestock Reproduction
- Web Of Science research areas
- Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science
- ESI research areas
- Agricultural Sciences