Abstract :
Estimates of (co)variance components were obtained for weights at birth, weaning and at 6, 9 and 12 months of age in
Jamunapari goats maintained at the Central Institute for Research on Goats, Makhdoom, Mathura, India, over a period of
23 years (1982 to 2004). Records of 4301 kids descended from 204 sires and 1233 does were used in the study. Analyses
were carried out by restricted maximum likelihood (REML), fitting an animal model and ignoring or including maternal genetic
or permanent environmental effects. Six different animal models were fitted for all traits. The best model was chosen after
testing the improvement of the log-likelihood values. Direct heritability estimates were inflated substantially for all traits when
maternal effects were ignored. Heritability estimates for weights at birth, weaning and at 6, 9 and 12 months of age were
0.12, 0.18, 0.13, 0.17 and 0.21, respectively. Maternal heritability of body weight declined from 0.19 at birth to 0.08 at
weaning and was near zero and not significant thereafter. Estimates of the fraction of variance due to maternal permanent
environmental effects were 0.09, 0.13 and 0.10 for body weights at weaning, 6 months and 9 months of age, respectively.
Results suggest that maternal additive effects were important only in the early stages of growth, whereas a permanent
environmental maternal effect existed from weaning to 9 months of age. These results indicate that modest rates of genetic
progress appear possible for all weights.
Keywords :
Body Weight , Jamunapari goats , maternal effects , genetic parameters