TY - JOUR
T1 - Microsatellite diversity of the Nordic type of goats in relation to breed conservation
T2 - how relevant is pure ancestry?
AU - ECONOGENE Consortium
AU - Lenstra, J. A.
AU - Tigchelaar, J.
AU - Biebach, I.
AU - Hallsson, J. H.
AU - Kantanen, J.
AU - Nielsen, V. H.
AU - Pompanon, F.
AU - Naderi, S.
AU - Rezaei, H. R.
AU - Sæther, N.
AU - Ertugrul, O.
AU - Grossen, C.
AU - Camenisch, G.
AU - Vos-Loohuis, M.
AU - van Straten, M.
AU - de Poel, E. A.
AU - Windig, J.
AU - Oldenbroek, K.
AU - Abo-Shehada, Mahamoud
AU - Marsan, Paolo Ajmone
AU - Tarrayrah, Jamil Al
AU - Angiolillo, Antonella
AU - Baret, Philip
AU - Baumung, Roswitha
AU - Beja-Pereira, Albano
AU - Bertaglia, Marco
AU - Bordonaro, Salvatore
AU - Brandt, Horst
AU - Bruford, Mike
AU - Caloz, Régis
AU - Canali, Gabriele
AU - Canon, Javier
AU - Cappuccio, Irene
AU - Carta, Antonello
AU - Cicogna, Mario
AU - Crepaldi, Paola
AU - Dalamitra, Stella
AU - Dobi, Petrit
AU - Dunner, Susana
AU - D'Urso, Giuseppe
AU - El Barody, M. A.A.
AU - England, Phillip
AU - Erhardt, Georg
AU - Ertuğrul, Okan
AU - Glowatzki, Marie Louise
AU - Ibeagha-Awemu, Eveline
AU - Strzelec, Ewa
AU - Fadlaoui, Aziz
AU - Fornarelli, Francesca
AU - Luikart, Gordon
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 The Authors. Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics Published by Blackwell Verlag GmbH
PY - 2017/2/1
Y1 - 2017/2/1
N2 - In the last decades, several endangered breeds of livestock species have been re-established effectively. However, the successful revival of the Dutch and Danish Landrace goats involved crossing with exotic breeds and the ancestry of the current populations is therefore not clear. We have generated genotypes for 27 FAO-recommended microsatellites of these landraces and three phenotypically similar Nordic-type landraces and compared these breeds with central European, Mediterranean and south-west Asian goats. We found decreasing levels of genetic diversity with increasing distance from the south-west Asian domestication site with a south-east-to-north-west cline that is clearly steeper than the Mediterranean east-to-west cline. In terms of genetic diversity, the Dutch Landrace comes next to the isolated Icelandic breed, which has an extremely low diversity. The Norwegian coastal goat and the Finnish and Icelandic landraces are clearly related. It appears that by a combination of mixed origin and a population bottleneck, the Dutch and Danish Land-races are separated from the other breeds. However, the current Dutch and Danish populations with the multicoloured and long-horned appearance effectively substitute for the original breed, illustrating that for conservation of cultural heritage, the phenotype of a breed is more relevant than pure ancestry and the genetic diversity of the original breed. More in general, we propose that for conservation, the retention of genetic diversity of an original breed and of the visual phenotype by which the breed is recognized and defined needs to be considered separately.
AB - In the last decades, several endangered breeds of livestock species have been re-established effectively. However, the successful revival of the Dutch and Danish Landrace goats involved crossing with exotic breeds and the ancestry of the current populations is therefore not clear. We have generated genotypes for 27 FAO-recommended microsatellites of these landraces and three phenotypically similar Nordic-type landraces and compared these breeds with central European, Mediterranean and south-west Asian goats. We found decreasing levels of genetic diversity with increasing distance from the south-west Asian domestication site with a south-east-to-north-west cline that is clearly steeper than the Mediterranean east-to-west cline. In terms of genetic diversity, the Dutch Landrace comes next to the isolated Icelandic breed, which has an extremely low diversity. The Norwegian coastal goat and the Finnish and Icelandic landraces are clearly related. It appears that by a combination of mixed origin and a population bottleneck, the Dutch and Danish Land-races are separated from the other breeds. However, the current Dutch and Danish populations with the multicoloured and long-horned appearance effectively substitute for the original breed, illustrating that for conservation of cultural heritage, the phenotype of a breed is more relevant than pure ancestry and the genetic diversity of the original breed. More in general, we propose that for conservation, the retention of genetic diversity of an original breed and of the visual phenotype by which the breed is recognized and defined needs to be considered separately.
KW - Conservation
KW - diversity
KW - goats
KW - microsatellite
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84977071225&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/jbg.12226
DO - 10.1111/jbg.12226
M3 - Article
C2 - 27339108
AN - SCOPUS:84977071225
SN - 0931-2668
VL - 134
SP - 78
EP - 84
JO - Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics
JF - Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics
IS - 1
ER -