106 research outputs found

    Genetics then and now: breeding the best and biotechnology

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    Summary In the past, domesticated animals were genetically improved by identifying meritorious individuals, mating animals displaying desired traits, continued breeding of related animals to perpetuate their superior traits and crossbreeding when inbreeding depression became evident. Today, assisted reproduction and biotechnology allow breeders to design and direct the reproductive course, disseminate desired traits and hasten genetic improvement. Generation interval can be greatly reduced by combining artificial insemination, which is the oldest and most widely used assisted reproductive technology, with the more recent techniques, such as oestrus synchronization, superovulation, ovum pick up from immature females even out of breeding season, and in vitro embryo production and transfer. Furthermore, the sex and genetic make-up of the offspring can be selected by using sex-sorted sperm for insemination, marker-assisted selection, functional deletion or addition of specific genes to the offspring's genome, or somatic cell nuclear transfer for cloning. However, the poor success rates with some of these procedures have delayed their large-scale application which, in turn, has hindered the proper evaluation of their genetic impact. The potential genetic consequences of some of these approaches merit the same degree of diligent evaluation that is currently extended to the procedures used for overcoming their 'technical' inefficiencies

    Myofibrillar Characteristics of Porcine Stress Syndrome

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    Porcine Stress Syndrome (PSS) is a genetic trait causing considerable economic loss to the swine industry through stress related death and the poor quality meat known as pale, soft, exudative (PSE) pork . A scanning and transmission electron microscopic examination of muscle biopsies from stress susceptible pigs revealed contracture bands , wide separation of myofibers and focal distortion and dissolution of myofibril s . The changes affecting myofibrillar characteristics and intra and intercellular accumulation of material suspected to be myoplasmic fluid in biopsies of halothane reactors suqqest that the myopathic alterations presaging the carcass deterioration into pale, soft , exudative pork are integrants of this syndrome and that the PSE trait may not be a postmortem change triggered by the environmental factors just prior to or during slaughter

    Environmentally Realistic Exposure to the Herbicide Atrazine Alters Some Sexually Selected Traits in Male Guppies

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    Male mating signals, including ornaments and courtship displays, and other sexually selected traits, like male-male aggression, are largely controlled by sex hormones. Environmental pollutants, notably endocrine disrupting compounds, can interfere with the proper functioning of hormones, thereby impacting the expression of hormonally regulated traits. Atrazine, one of the most widely used herbicides, can alter sex hormone levels in exposed animals. I tested the effects of environmentally relevant atrazine exposures on mating signals and behaviors in male guppies, a sexually dimorphic freshwater fish. Prolonged atrazine exposure reduced the expression of two honest signals: the area of orange spots (ornaments) and the number of courtship displays performed. Atrazine exposure also reduced aggression towards competing males in the context of mate competition. In the wild, exposure levels vary among individuals because of differential distribution of the pollutants across habitats; hence, differently impacted males often compete for the same mates. Disrupted mating signals can reduce reproductive success as females avoid mating with perceptibly suboptimal males. Less aggressive males are at a competitive disadvantage and lose access to females. This study highlights the effects of atrazine on ecologically relevant mating signals and behaviors in exposed wildlife. Altered reproductive traits have important implications for population dynamics, evolutionary patterns, and conservation of wildlife species
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