Genetic variation within the Merino sheep breed: analysis of closely related populations using microsatellites
✍ Scribed by C Diez-Tascón; R P Littlejohn; P A R Almeida; A M Crawford
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 296 KB
- Volume
- 31
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0268-9146
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✦ Synopsis
Genetic relationships among six populations of Merino sheep were investigated using microsatellites. The history of the six populations is relatively well documented, with all being derived from the Spanish Merino breed within the last 400 years. Genetic variation was highest amongst the Spanish and Portuguese populations, although the preservation of genetic diversity within the other populations was high. By a variety of different statistical tests the French Mutton, German Mutton and New Zealand Merino populations could be differentiated from each other and the Iberian Merinos, indicating that microsatellites are able to track relatively recent changes in the population structure of sheep breeds. The dendrograms constructed on the basis of microsatellite allelic frequencies showed that populations that have shared selection criteria (meat vs. wool) tend to cluster together.