Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1979, Qupperneq 93

Íslenskar landbúnaðarrannsóknir - 01.03.1979, Qupperneq 93
TRAITS IN ICEL. TOELTER HORSES I. 91 to be expected. Although far from conc- lusive, this might therefore indicate that mares judged on and in connection with the horse shows are more selected for ga- iting ability and less selected for „legs“ score than the males. Although the selec- tion of the offspring used in this material, or their parents, is more intensive on stallions, when compared to the even sex ratio of newborn foals, this is totally re- versed when looked at the selection of al- ready adult horses to be performance test- ed in connection with the horse-shows. Almost every stallion broken and trained is tested at 4 to 8 years of age, but has undergone a preselection when it was decided whether the colt should be ca- strated or not at the age of 2 to 3 years. As Icelandic ponies are unbroken at that age one would expect selection on the indivi- dual performance at this stage to be more eífectively based on body conformation than the traits of riding ability. It should be noticed, however, that the preselection is based on some characters, whose parameters remain totally unest- imated. Therefore there is a need for a defmition of the characters on which it is, or should be, based. The desired charac- ters must be sufficiently heritable and have high genetic correlations with the economically important traits of adult horses. Such information would probably most efficiently be combined with infor- mation on parents and sibs, so as to maximise the correlation between such an index and the true breeding value of the individual (Henderson, 1963). When the second stage selection occurs, based on the traits, whose parameters were estim- ated in this study, an inclusion of infor- mation, on the nearest kin in the index, should increase the accuracy of the selec- tion further still. From table 5 it is obvious that the phen- otypic values of the body measurements are good guides to the genotypic values, in contrast to the phenotypic values of most of the subjectively scored traits. The low correlations between the body measurem- ents and the traits do not indicate that much correlated response is to be expec- ted in the traits from selection of the four body measurements. Thus it is desirable to investigate and develop another objec- tive body measurements, more related to the mechanism of movement and the des- ired body conformation. Inclusion of a highly heritable trait genetically correlat- ed with valuable traits, although of no economic importance itself, can increase the efficiency of a selection index substan- tially (Gjedrem, 1967). Sales and Hill (1976) point out that for these kinds of indices the loss in efficiency from poor estimation of parameters can be substan- tial. Reasonably secure use of such indices therefore requires quite precise parameter estimates. A very great deal of the environmental (or non-additive genetic) variation which modifies the phenotypic value of the traits, is undoubtedly due to differences in the skill of riders and trainers. This could be reduced, and the efficiency of selection consequently increased, by more educat- ion and standardization of horsemanship. That would certainly be a quicker means of improvement than the slow process of breeding, but also speeds up the latter one.
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