Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2447966 Livestock Science 2009 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The objective of this study was to evaluate genotype by environment interactions for growth rate and carcass leanness in organic and conventional pig production environments. Organic breeding values for fattening traits were estimated for 37 Hampshire AI-boars based on slaughter records registered for 1805 crossbred offspring raised in an organic environment. The offspring were born and raised in herds certified for organic production. The statistical model included the fixed effects of sex, litter size at 2 weeks and herd. It also included the random effects of herd-year-season, birth litter and animal. Conventional breeding values for the same boars were captured from the breeding organization’s genetic evaluation. In the organic environment h2 was estimated to 0.30 and 0.37 for growth rate and carcass leanness, respectively (rg = − 0.11). Spearman rank correlations between organic and conventional breeding values, based on 29 boars with ≥ 20 progenies, were 0.48 for growth rate and 0.42 for carcass leanness. Both correlations were significantly different from 0 and 1. In conclusion, the results of the present study indicate weak genotype by environment interactions for both growth rate and carcass leanness in organic and conventional pig production environments, and there is some re-ranking of boars’ breeding values between environments.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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