1950
DOI: 10.1007/bf02986789
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Estimation of genetic gain in milk yield by selection in a closed herd of dairy cattle

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Cited by 339 publications
(170 citation statements)
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“…Assuming a genetic gain of 0.22 standard deviations annually, this equates to a potential genetic gain of 7.3 and 6.9 mg/kg for Ca and P, respectively. The actual gain achievable, however, will be dependent on the traits in the breeding goal, their covariances with Ca and P and their relative weighting within the breeding goal, as well as other factors like intensity of selection, accuracy of selection and generation interval (Rendel and Robertson, 1950).…”
Section: Heritabilitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Assuming a genetic gain of 0.22 standard deviations annually, this equates to a potential genetic gain of 7.3 and 6.9 mg/kg for Ca and P, respectively. The actual gain achievable, however, will be dependent on the traits in the breeding goal, their covariances with Ca and P and their relative weighting within the breeding goal, as well as other factors like intensity of selection, accuracy of selection and generation interval (Rendel and Robertson, 1950).…”
Section: Heritabilitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was assumed that all four traits in the breeding objective were measured simultaneously (that is, in each female, in each lactation). The genetic progresses in the population were calculated adding up the progress in each group, following the Rendel and Robertson (1950) formula to take into account the differences in the generation interval. The different proportions of use of natural service rams (64%), testing AI rams (17%) and proven AI rams (19%) were included in the formula.…”
Section: Estimation Of Genetic Gainsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The forgotten 'omics' Genetic gain is known to be a function of selection intensity, accuracy of selection, genetic variation present among selection candidates, and generation interval (Rendel and Robertson, 1950). However, what is missing from this simple definition is how the phenotype under investigation reflects the true trait of interest over and above that reflected in the heritability.…”
Section: Challenges and Future Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%