Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2457501 Small Ruminant Research 2010 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

This report is on the development and genetic distinctiveness of the Meatmaster, a locally developed South African composite sheep breed. Genotypes of 175 Meatmaster sheep were compared to genotypes of 242 individuals from six putative parent breeds and an outgroup. All comparisons were based on 10 microsatellite loci. No significant breed-specific alleles were found for the Meatmaster or most of the parental breeds. Nevertheless, a Bayesian-based assignment test placed 69.4% of Meatmaster individuals in clusters distinct from the well-defined breed-specific clusters of the parent breeds. Population differentiation from RST values showed low differentiation among the four Meatmaster populations (0.004–0.028), higher values for pair-wise combinations of Meatmaster populations and the parent breeds (0.051–0.194), and the highest values among Meatmaster populations and the outgroup: Namakwa Afrikaner (0.237–0.301). Clustering in a dendrogram placed all Meatmaster populations in distinct clusters with strong bootstrap support (97%). Trends from a hierarchical analysis of total variation confirmed some distinctiveness in the Meatmaster, with 2.315% of total variation found among Meatmaster populations compared to 11.455% among breeds. High levels of heterozygosity and numbers of alleles in Meatmaster populations indicated good retention of genetic diversity during the potential bottleneck created by selection in its early history. Results are discussed with reference to genetic distinctiveness in this developing breed, the genetic contribution of the Damara as a common ancestor, conservation of genetic diversity and an application for future genetic management for the Meatmaster breed.

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