A performance test for boar taint compounds in live boars

Baes, C.; Mattei, S.; Luther, H.; Ampuero, S.; Sidler, X.; Bee, G.; Spring, Peter; Hofer, A. (2013). A performance test for boar taint compounds in live boars animal, 7(5), pp. 714-720. Cambridge University Press 10.1017/S1751731112002273

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Genetically reducing boar taint using low-taint lines is considered the most sustainable and economic long-term alternative to surgical castration of male pigs. Owing to the high heritability of the main boar taint components (androstenone, skatole and indole), breeding is an excellent tool for reducing the number of tainted carcasses. To incorporate boar taint into breeding programmes, standardized performance testing is required. The objective of this study was to develop and formally present a performance test for the main boar taint compounds on live breeding candidates. First, a standardized performance test for boar taint was established. A biopsy device was developed to extract small tissue samples (200 to 300 mg) from breeding candidates. Quantification of boar taint components from these small samples using specialized chemical extraction methods proved accurate and repeatable (r = 0.938). Following establishment of the method, biopsy samples of 516 live boars (100 to 130 kg live weight) were collected in the second step. Various mixed linear models were tested for each boar taint compound; models were ranked in terms of their information content. Pedigree information of 2245 ancestors of biopsied animals was included, and genetic parameters were estimated using univariate and multivariate models. Androstenone (in μg/g liquid fat (LF): mean = 0.578, σ = 0.527), skatole (in μg/g LF: mean = 0.033, σ = 0.002) and indole (in μg/g LF: mean = 0.032, σ = 0.002) levels obtained by biopsy were plausible. Heritability estimates for androstenone calculated with univariate (0.453) and multivariate (0.452) analyses were comparable to those in the literature. Heritabilities for skatole (0.495) and indole (0.550) were higher than that for androstenone. Genetic and phenotypic correlations were similar to those published previously. Our results show that data on boar taint compounds from small adipose samples obtained by biopsy provide similar genetic parameters as that described in the literature for larger samples and are therefore a reliable performance test for boar taint in live breeding candidates.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences HAFL > Resource-efficient agricultural production systems
School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences HAFL > Agriculture

Name:

Baes, C.;
Mattei, S.;
Luther, H.;
Ampuero, S.;
Sidler, X.;
Bee, G.;
Spring, Peter and
Hofer, A.

Subjects:

S Agriculture > SF Animal culture

ISSN:

1751-7311

Publisher:

Cambridge University Press

Language:

English

Submitter:

David Zimmer

Date Deposited:

03 Sep 2019 11:21

Last Modified:

03 Sep 2019 11:21

Publisher DOI:

10.1017/S1751731112002273

ARBOR DOI:

10.24451/arbor.8119

URI:

https://arbor.bfh.ch/id/eprint/8119

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