Economic evaluation of genomic selection in small ruminants: a sheep meat breeding program

Archive ouverte

Shumbusho, Félicien | Raoul, Jérôme | Astruc, Jean-Michel | Palhiere, Isabelle | Lemarié, Stephane | Fugeray-Scarbel, Aline | Elsen, Jean Michel

Edité par CCSD ; Published by Elsevier (since 2021) / Cambridge University Press (until 2020) -

Recent genomic evaluation studies using real data and predicting genetic gain by modeling breeding programs have reported moderate expected benefits from the replacement of classic selection schemes by genomic selection (GS) in small ruminants. The objectives of this study were to compare the cost, monetary genetic gain and economic efficiency of classic selection and GS schemes in the meat sheep industry. Deterministic methods were used to model selection based on multi-trait indices from a sheep meat breeding program. Decisional variables related to male selection candidates and progeny testing were optimized to maximize the annual monetary genetic gain (AMGG), that is, a weighted sum of meat and maternal traits annual genetic gains. For GS, a reference population of 2000 individuals was assumed and genomic information was available for evaluation of male candidates only. In the classic selection scheme, males breeding values were estimated from own and offspring phenotypes. In GS, different scenarios were considered, differing by the information used to select males (genomic only, genomic+own performance, genomic+offspring phenotypes). The results showed that all GS scenarios were associated with higher total variable costs than classic selection (if the cost of genotyping was 123 euros/animal). In terms of AMGG and economic returns, GS scenarios were found to be superior to classic selection only if genomic information was combined with their own meat phenotypes (GS-Pheno) or with their progeny test information. The predicted economic efficiency, defined as returns (proportional to number of expressions of AMGG in the nucleus and commercial flocks) minus total variable costs, showed that the best GS scenario (GS-Pheno) was up to 15% more efficient than classic selection. For all selection scenarios, optimization increased the overall AMGG, returns and economic efficiency. As a conclusion, our study shows that some forms of GS strategies are more advantageous than classic selection, provided that GS is already initiated (i.e. the initial reference population is available). Optimizing decisional variables of the classic selection scheme could be of greater benefit than including genomic information in optimized designs.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Economic evaluation of genomic selection in small ruminants : A case of french sheep meat breeding program

Archive ouverte | Elsen, Jean Michel, J. M. | CCSD

International audience

De la modélisation des schémas de sélection à l'analyse de l'efficacité économique de la sélection génomique : méthode et quelques cas d'application

Archive ouverte | Fugeray-Scarbel, Aline | CCSD

Les travaux en génétique quantitative permettent d’estimer le progrès génétique réalisable à partir de différents schémas de sélection. L’efficacité relative de la sélection génomique par rapport à la sélection conventionnelle es...

Optimal mating strategies to manage a heterozygous advantage major gene in sheep

Archive ouverte | Raoul, Jérôme | CCSD

International audience. Some mutations (or 'major genes') have a desirable effect in heterozygous carriers but an undesirable effect in homozygous carriers. When these mutations affect a trait of significant economi...

Chargement des enrichissements...