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Title: CALVING EASE (CO)VARIANCE COMPONENTS FOR A SIRE-MATERNAL GRANDSIRE EVALUATION MODEL

Author
item Wiggans, George
item MISZTAL, I - UNIV OF GA
item Van Tassell, Curtis - Curt

Submitted to: Journal of Dairy Science
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 12/15/2002
Publication Date: 1/15/2003
Citation: Wiggans, G.R., Misztal, I. Van Tassell, C.R., 2003Calving ease (Co)variance components for a sire-maternal grandsire threshold model. J Dairy Sci. 6(5):1845-8.

Interpretive Summary: Variance components were estimated from subsets of the US calving ease (CE) database which includes over 10 million calving records. A threshold sire-maternal grandsire (MGS) model was used that included random herd-year, sire, MGS, and residual effects and fixed year-season, parity-sex, and birth year of sire and MGS effects. The variance components from this analysis were needed for use in the recently implemented US sire-MGS model genetic evaluation. The sire-MGS model provides evaluations for MGS effects in addition to ones for the direct (sire) effects. The MGS effect includes maternal calving ease effects. The new model also provides more accurate evaluations because it better adjusts the sire effects for differences in the calving ease of their mates.

Technical Abstract: Variance components for a threshold sire-maternal grandsire (MGS) model were estimated from subsets of the US calving ease (CE) database which includes over 10 million calving records with CE scored 1 (no problem) to 5 (extreme difficulty). Selected records included an identified MGS, and sire and MGS among the 2601 most frequently appearing bulls. The data were further restricted by requiring 20 records in each herd year. Five mutually exclusive sample datasets of approximately 200,000 records each were created based on herd code. The model included random herd-year, sire, MGS, and residual effects and fixed year-season, parity-sex, and birth year of sire and MGS effects. Fewer than 50 iterations were required to reach convergence. The (co)variance component estimates from the five replicates were quite similar. The set of estimates (herd-year variance = 0.438, sire variance = 0.022, MGS variance = 0.016, sire-MGS covariance = 0.009) that yielded among the highest heritabilities (direct heritability = .086, maternal heritability = .048) and a correlation of direct and maternal effects near the mean (direct-maternal correlation = -.12) was selected for use in the implementation of a sire-MGS model for calving ease.