Does the Walloon Piétrain pig breed require preservation measures?

Piétrain pigs are used worldwide as terminal sires, and they are not expected to require preservation measures. However, the number of pure Piétrain breeders is dwindling everywhere and also in Wallonia (southern Belgium), the region where the breed is originated from. As a first step, the objective of this study was to assess the genetic diversity in Walloon Piétrain pig populations by using pedigree information. A total of 199 boars, whose breeders could be identified and which passed through performances testing using crossbred progeny at the performances recording station during the last t... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Wilmot, Hélène
Vanderick, Sylvie
Reis Mota, Rodrigo
Mayeres, Patrick
Gengler, Nicolas
Dokumenttyp: conference poster not in proceedings
Erscheinungsdatum: 2019
Schlagwörter: SNP / EBV / pseudo-phenotypes / Life sciences / Animal production & animal husbandry / Sciences du vivant / Productions animales & zootechnie
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-26905954
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://orbi.uliege.be/handle/2268/239450

Piétrain pigs are used worldwide as terminal sires, and they are not expected to require preservation measures. However, the number of pure Piétrain breeders is dwindling everywhere and also in Wallonia (southern Belgium), the region where the breed is originated from. As a first step, the objective of this study was to assess the genetic diversity in Walloon Piétrain pig populations by using pedigree information. A total of 199 boars, whose breeders could be identified and which passed through performances testing using crossbred progeny at the performances recording station during the last ten years, were used for pedigree extraction. Kinship coefficients were determined and a classical multi-dimensional scaling (MDS) was performed on those boars for herd comparison purposes. In addition, breeders who have stopped their activity were identified in order to check genetic diversity loss overtime. Four groups were identified: a first cluster of Walloon Brabant breeders; a second core cluster, which suggests high levels of inbreeding, composed mainly by Hainaut breeders; a third cluster with great diversity, represented by a breeder whose animals may had German boars influence; and the last cluster formed by two breeders. The breeders from all four clusters are in ongoing pig breeding activities. However, due to their aging as well as the lack of new breeders, conservation measures establishment may be urgent in order to preserve genetic resources. As Walloon Piétrain breeders tend to keep very different phenotypes, complementary principal components analysis will be performed by using pseudo-phenotypes, by using deregressed estimated breeding values (EBV), to be compared with previous MDS results. Finally, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) markers from different European Piétrain pig populations will be used to determine genomic relationships to further verify if Walloon Piétrain population(s) have intrinsic particularities, which would justify conservation measure