Title of article
Trend of bias in prediction of genomic estimated breeding values due to selective genotyping in genomic selection schemes in consecutive generations
Author/Authors
Jamali, Jabar Department of Animal Science - Faculty of Animal and Aquatic Science - Sari Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources University, Sari, Iran , Hafezian, Hasan Department of Animal Science - Faculty of Animal and Aquatic Science - Sari Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources University, Sari, Iran , Gholizadeh, Mohsen Department of Animal Science - Faculty of Animal and Aquatic Science - Sari Agricultural Sciences and Natural Resources University, Sari, Iran , Ehsani, Alireza Department of Animal Science - Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, Iran
Pages
7
From page
57
To page
63
Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate the trend of bias in genomic
estimated breeding values (GEBVs) arising from selective genotyping of the candidate population in an ongoing selection scheme. The bias was calculated as the regression of true breeding values (TBVs) on GEBVs. A simulation study was performed under two scenarios with selection intensities (SI) of 0.798 and 1.755 for
three traits with heritability (h2
) of 0.1, 0.25 and 0.4 in 10 consecutive generations.
Regression of TBVs on GEBVs was close to one for the first generation when selective genotyping was random, and it continuously receded from one as selection
shifted to choose animals with high EBVs from generations 2 to 10. Biasedness
became larger with increased SI and decreased h2
. Further, biasedness increased
over the generations but the rate of change in biasedness decreased dramatically
after the second generation and became almost steady after generation 4 which may
be due to Bulmer effect. The findings showed that scaling down the GEBVs, using
a scale parameter, might help removing biasedness in generation 4 onwards.
Keywords
bias , selective genotyping , genomic selection
Serial Year
2019
Record number
2497007
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