Abstract :
Variance and covariance components for piglet survival in different periods were estimated from individual records of 133 004
Danish Landrace piglets and 89 928 Danish Yorkshire piglets, using a liability threshold model including both direct and
maternal additive genetic effects. At the individual piglet level, the estimates of direct heritability in Landrace were 0.035,
0.057 and 0.027, and in Yorkshire the estimates were 0.012, 0.030 and 0.025 for liability of survival at farrowing (SVB), from
birth to day 5 (SV5) and from day 6 to weaning (SVW), respectively. The estimates of maternal heritability for SVB, SV5 and
SVW were, respectively, 0.057, 0.040 and 0.030 in Landrace, and 0.050, 0.038 and 0.019 in Yorkshire. Both direct and maternal
genetic correlations between the three survival traits were low and not significantly different from zero, except for a moderate
direct genetic correlation between SVB and SV5 and between SV5 and SVW in Landrace. Direct and maternal genetic
correlations between piglet birth weight (BW) and SV5 were moderately high, but the correlations between BW and SVB and
between BW and SVW were low and most of them were not significantly different from zero. These results suggest that
effective genetic improvement in piglet survival before weaning by selection should be based on both direct and maternal
additive genetic effects and treat survival in different periods as different traits.
Keywords :
direct heritability , maternal heritability , piglet survival , genetic correlation