Interbull Routine Genetic Evaluation for Conformation Traits

April 2014

 

Introduction

The latest routine international evaluation for conformation traits took place as scheduled at the Interbull Centre. Data from twenty (22) countries were included in this evaluation.

International genetic evaluations for calving traits of bulls from Australia, Belgium, Canada, Switzerland, Czech Republic, Germany, Denmark-Finland-Sweden, Spain, France, United Kingdom, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Korea, The Netherlands, Norway, New Zealand, Poland, South Africa, Estonia, Slovenia, Portugal and the United States of America were computed. Brown Swiss, Guernsey, Holstein, Jersey and Red Dairy Cattle breed data were included in this evaluation.

Changes in national procedures

Changes in the national genetic evaluation of calving traits are as follows:

ZAF JER  Quite a lot of bulls apper missing in this evaluation or have changed from official to unofficial
CHE BSW / HOL  As usual, reductions in effective daughter contributions for conformation traits are due to slight changes in definition of contemporary groups (herd*3 year period, starting with the most recent year with data).
SVN BSW / HOL Base change
NLD
BSW / HOL
JER / RDC
For conformation we changed the calcution of overall conformation
AUS
GUE  /HOL
JER / RDC
Changed our genetic base by moving one year ahead. the base constitutes  of bulls born between 2000 and 2004
ITA HOL Currently, cows calving before January 1998 are deleted.Base change
ITA BSW Some sire have lost some daughters for the wrong parentage verification
GBR BSW Participates for the first time in a routine run.
NZL
HOL / JER
RDC
A number of 2007 born animals changed from official to unofficial proof due to our data extraction routines whereby bulls with no daughter do not get extracted once they reach a certain age. Herd and daughter number reduction due to parentage verification.Year correlation and SD ratio are just outside the thresholds for the 2009 born sires because these bulls are only getting their first comformation proof. 2008-born without progeny are no longer extracted. 
ESP HOL Particiapte first time with bcs.


INTERBULL CHANGES COMPARED TO THE DECEMBER ROUTINE RUN

1)   Data submission for pedigree, EBV/PTA, and parameters is possible only through uploading of the data to the Interbull Data Exchange Area (IDEA);
2)   Interbull Centre has moved to a completely new MACE evaluation software called "Dairy System for International Evaluation (DAISIE)", partly because of the extended use of IDEA for EBV/PTA, and partly because of our continuous efforts to make the system more effective than before;
3)   All trait groups (including conformation traits) are now evaluated in-house.
4)   The file containing heritability values now contain more decimal places for heritability, and one extra field for the definition of reference base population;
5)   The file containing genetic correlations has changed name from rG_columns_all to cor{RUNID}.csv, and also contains one extra field for the number of common bulls;
6)   The file containing sire genetic standard deviations has changed name from sire_std_columns_all to std{RUNID}.csv;
7)   Sire-MGS based pedigree files are not distributed anymore;
8)   Parent averages in the "ipa" format are not distributed anymore;
9)   An import AI bull (type of proof = 21) with official publication status 'Y' from a given country is included in the distribution file if the bull has a first country proof included from a different country OR a second country proof is included with minimum required number of daughters or EDC (20, 10, 150, 20, 20, and 80) and herds (20, 10, 150, 20, 20, and 80) for different breeds (BSW, GUE, HOL, JER, RDC and SIM), respectively;
10)   Bulls with some missing pedigree information (sires and/or dam and/or birthdate) are excluded from evaluations;
11)   Standardization factors are not used anymore;
12)   Post-processing of genetic correlation are now applied to all trait groups.


Data and method of analysis

Data were national genetic evaluations of AI sampled bulls with at least 10 daughters or 10 EDC (for clinical mastitis and maternal calving traits at least 50 daughters or 50 EDC, and for direct calving traits at least 50 calvings or 50 EDC) in at least 10 herds. Table 1 presents the amount of data included in this Interbull evaluation for all breeds. 

National proofs were first de-regressed within country and then analysed jointly with a linear model including the effects of evaluation country, genetic group of bull and bull merit. Heritability estimates used in both the de-regression and international evaluation were as in each country's national evaluation.

Estimated genetic parameters and sire standard deviations are shown in APPENDIX I and the corresponding number of common bulls are listed in APPENDIX II.


Scientific literature

The international genetic evaluation procedure is based on international work described in the following scientific publications:

International genetic evaluation computation:

Schaeffer. 1994. J. Dairy Sci. 77:2671-2678
Klei, 1998. Interbull Bulletin 17:3-7

Verification and Genetic trend validation:

Klei et al., 2002. Interbull Bulletin 29:178-182.
Boichard et al., 1995. J. Dairy Sci. 78:431-437

Weighting factors:

Fikse and Banos, 2001. J. Dairy Sci. 84:1759-1767

De-regression:

Sigurdsson and G. Banos. 1995. Acta Agric. Scand. 45:207-219
Jairath et al. 1998. J. Dairy Sci. Vol. 81:550-562

Genetic parameter estimation:

Klei and Weigel, 1998, Interbull Bulletin 17:8-14
Sullivan, 1999. Interbull Bulletin 22:146-148

Post-processing of estimated genetic correlations:

Mark et al., 2003, Interbull Bulletin 30:126-135
Jorjani et al., 2003. J. Dairy Sci. 86:677-679
https://wiki.interbull.org/public/rG%20procedure?action=print

Time edits

Weigel and Banos. 1997. J. Dairy Sci. 80:3425-3430

International reliability estimation

Harris and Johnson. 1998. Interbull Bulletin 17:31-36

 

Next routine international evaluation

The next routine evaluation of Interbull for production, conformation, udder health, longevity, calving, female fertility and workability traits is scheduled for August 2014. 
Deadline for sending data to the Interbull Centre is Tuesday August 22, 2014, 17:00 CET; confidential distribution of results is targeted for Thursday July 31, 2014, with earliest possible official release of results on August 12, 2014.
 Please remark the three week turn around time.

Next test international evaluation

The next test run for production, conformation, udder health, longevity, calving, female fertility and workability traits will take place in September 2014. 
Countries planning to introduce changes in their national evaluation procedures and wishing to have them included in the routine Interbull evaluation, should have their data examined in this test run. 
New data and validation results should be sent to the Interbull Centre no later than September 2, 2014, 17:00 CET.

PUBLICATION OF INTERBULL TEST RUN 

Test evaluation results are meant for review purposes only and should not be published.