LIMOUSIN TODAY April2019_WEB | Page 20

Performance Line Animal Breeding 101: Heritability By Tonya Amen, National Center for Beef Excellence Last month, I shared with you some information about the value of heterosis. This month, I’d like to discuss a similar sounding and related word -- heritability. It’s a word that comes up frequently when cattle genetics is discussed. But, what does it really mean? For starters, it is completely different than the word inherited. It also does not mean that describing a trait as 60% heritable (your height, for example) means that 60% of the reason you are as tall (or short) as you are, is due to genetics, even though this is the most common way I hear it discussed. Instead, heritability describes how much of the variation for a trait that exists in a population is due to variation in genetics that can be passed on from parent to offspring. To start, let’s take a look at why animals perform the way they do for most traits of economic importance: weight traits, reproductive traits, carcass traits, etc. These traits are referred to quantitative traits, and traits in this category share several characteristics: something like this: Var BW = Var G + Var E . Specifically, the variation that we see in animal performance for BW is due to the fact that there is variation in animals’ genetic value for that trait as well as the various environments the animals are exposed to. Of course, there are two pieces to the genetic component (G): 1. Breeding Value (BV) is the piece that can be selected for. If we were able to add up the effects of all of the alleles an animal has for a specific trait, the sum would be it’s breeding value. Half of an animal’s alleles are passed on to its offspring and ½ of a breeding value is referred to as a progeny difference. You are well familiar with Expected Progeny Differences – estimates of the portion of an animal’s genetic worth that can be passed on to their offspring. 2. Gene Combination Value (GCV) is the piece that is due to the way the genetics from sire and dam combine in the offspring and is determined purely by chance. Hybrid vigor and inbreeding depression fall into this category. • there are many genes that impact performance • the traits are expressed on a continuous scale (a range of weights, for example), instead of lumped into categories (red vs black) So, if we were to re-write our formula for the variation that exists in a certain population for birth weight, it would now look something like this: Var BW = Var BV + Var GCV + Var E . • the environment can play a role – sometimes large – in how animals perform for these traits. Recall that heritability (h 2 ): the amount of variance in a trait (P) that can be explained by variance in BV. Applying what we’ve learned above, the formula would look like this: h 2 =Var BV / Var P . Using birth weight as an example, if we were to write a formula for variation in weights that is observed in a group of animals, it would look 18 | APRIL 2019 Table 1 below shows the heritability estimates for the various traits in the beef cattle, there’s