Fleece rot in Merino sheep. 1. The heritability of fleece rot in unselected flocks of medium-wool Peppin Merinos
BJ McGuirk and KD Atkins
Australian Journal of Agricultural Research
35(3) 423 - 434
Published: 1984
Abstract
Fleece rot was observed on hogget ewes and rams in unselected medium-wool Peppin Merino flocks over a 15-year period at Trangie Agricultural Research Centre, N.S.W. Each sheep was given a score of from 0 (no fleece rot) to 5 (very severe fleece rot) following a subjective visual assessment along the backline prior to shearing. Data were analysed as two measures of susceptibility to fleece rot: a score as defined above; and incidence, where fleece rot was treated as an all-or-none trait. The average incidence of fleece rot over 23 flock x year combinations was 36%, but this varied widely, from 8 to 90%. Other environmental factors (sex, birth type and age of dam) generally had small and non-significant effects on fleece rot. After adjusting for significant environmental effects, the half-sib heritability estimates for sires:with at least three progeny were 0.36 (¦0.07) for score and 0.23 (¦0.07) for incidence. Separate anaiyses were conducted for flock x year data sets of low, intermediate and high incidences. The highest heritability estimate for incidence was, as expectedly theoretically, obtained in the data set of intermediate incidence. Offspring-dam heritability estimates ( ¦ s.e.) for fleece rot score and incidence were respectively 0.21 (¦ 0 0 5 ) and 0.14(¦0.04). Corresponding offspring-sire estimates for score and incidence were 0.20 (¦0.06) and 0.17 (¦0.05). It is concluded that a realistic estimate of the heritability of the underlying liability to fleece rat is of the order of 40%.https://doi.org/10.1071/AR9840423
© CSIRO 1984