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Johnston, David
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Given Name
David
David
Surname
Johnston
UNE Researcher ID
une-id:djohnsto
Email
djohnsto@une.edu.au
Preferred Given Name
David
School/Department
Animal Genetics and Breeding Unit
13 results
Now showing 1 - 10 of 13
- PublicationGenome-wide association studies of female reproduction in tropically adapted beef cattle(American Society of Animal Science, 2012)
;Hawken, R J; ;Barendse, W; ;Prayaga, K C; ;Reverter, Antonio ;Lehnert, S A ;Fortes, M R S ;Collis, E ;Barris, W C ;Corbet, N J ;Williams, P J ;Fordyce, G ;Holroyd, R GWalkley, J R WThe genetics of reproduction is poorly understood because the heritabilities of traits currently recorded are low. To elucidate the genetics underlying reproduction in beef cattle, we performed a genome-wide association study using the bovine SNP50 chip in 2 tropically adapted beef cattle breeds, Brahman and Tropical Composite. Here we present the results for 3 female reproduction traits: 1) age at puberty, defined as age in days at first observed corpus luteum (CL) after frequent ovarian ultrasound scans (AGECL); 2) the postpartum anestrous interval, measured as the number of days from calving to first ovulation postpartum (first rebreeding interval, PPAI); and 3) the occurrence of the first postpartum ovulation before weaning in the first rebreeding period (PW), defined from PPAI. In addition, correlated traits such as BW, height, serum IGF1 concentration, condition score, and fatness were also examined. In the Brahman and Tropical Composite cattle, 169 [false positive rate (FPR) = 0.262] and 84 (FPR = 0.581) SNP, respectively, were significant (P < 0.001) for AGECL. In Brahman, 41% of these significant markers mapped to a single chromosomal region on BTA14. In Tropical Composites, 16% of these significant markers were located on BTA5. For PPAI, 66 (FPR = 0.67) and 113 (FPR = 0.432) SNP were significant (P < 0.001) in Brahman and Tropical Composite, respectively, whereas for PW, 68 (FPR = 0.64) and 113 (FPR = 0.432) SNP were significant (P < 0.01). In Tropical Composites, the largest concentration of PPAI markers were located on BTA5 [19% (PPAI) and 23% (PW)], and BTA16 [17% (PPAI) and 18% (PW)]. In Brahman cattle, the largest concentration of markers for postpartum anestrus was located on BTA3 (14% for PPAI and PW) and BTA14 (17% PPAI). Very few of the significant markers for female reproduction traits for the Brahman and Tropical Composite breeds were located in the same chromosomal regions. However, fatness and BW traits as well as serum IGF1 concentration were found to be associated with similar genome regions within and between breeds. Clusters of SNP associated with multiple traits were located on BTA14 in Brahman and BTA5 in Tropical Composites. - PublicationBull traits measured early in life as indicators of herd fertility(Association for the Advancement of Animal Breeding and Genetics (AAABG), 2011)
;Corbet, N J ;Burns, B M ;Corbet, D H ;Crisp, J M; ;McGowan, M R ;Venus, B KHolroyd, R GThis study investigated the genetic relationships of blood hormones, scrotal size, body weight, condition score and flight time measured on young bulls to 12 months of age with key reproductive traits in Brahman and Tropical Composite breeds (n=4079). Heritability of the traits ranged from 0.17 to 0.72 indicating potential for genetic change in both populations. Genetic correlations with presence of sperm in the ejaculate at 12 months of age, percent normal sperm at 2 years old, and heifer age at puberty were moderate, in some cases up to 0.61, indicating a potential to improve the efficiency of selection of breeding replacements. - PublicationSperm abnormality traits can contribute to the genetic evaluation for male and female reproduction in tropical beef genotypesGenetic parameters for traits describing the incidence of sperm cell abnormalities (proximal droplets (PD), abnormalities of the sperm cell mid-piece and tails and heads) were estimated for 1,234 Brahman (BRAH) and 1,914 Tropical Composite (TCOMP) bulls at 12, 18 and 24 months of age. At 12 months, only 8.3% of BRAH bulls were sufficiently mature to produce an analysable sample, compared to 50.4% for TCOMP. PD, associated with samples from peripubertal bulls, were the most common abnormality, with highest incidence for BRAH at 18 months (24.6%) and TCOMP at 12 months (22.6%) of age. Heritabilities for PD tended to be higher than for other abnormalities, at 0.39 for BRAH at 24 months, and 0.45 for TCOMP bulls at 12 months. Genetic correlations of PD with female age at puberty (AP) and lactation anoestrous interval (LAI) were moderate for BRAH bulls at 18 (rg = 0.51 and 0.35 respectively) and 24 months (rg = 0.22 and 0.49 respectively). These relationships were generally weaker for TCOMP, though PD at 12 months showed a comparable genetic correlation with LAI of 0.51. AP and LAI are difficult and expensive to measure for genetic evaluation. The potential for PD to be exploited as a direct and early descriptor of male puberty, and an indicator trait for female reproductive performance, presents new opportunities to apply selection to improve reproductive performance in tropical beef breeds.
- PublicationGenetics of early and lifetime annual reproductive performance in cows of two tropical beef genotypes in northern Australia(CSIRO Publishing, 2014)
; ; ;Fordyce, G ;Holroyd, R G ;Williams, P J ;Corbet, N JGrant, TReproduction records from 2137 cows first mated at 2 years of age and recorded through to 8.5 years of age were used to study the genetics of early and lifetime reproductive performance from two genotypes (1020 Brahman and 1117 Tropical Composite) in tropical Australian production systems. Regular ultrasound scanning of the reproductive tract, coupled with full recording of mating, calving and weaning histories, allowed a comprehensive evaluation of a range of reproductive traits. Results showed components traits of early reproductive performance had moderate to high heritabilities, especially in Brahmans. The heritability of lactation anoestrous interval in 3-year-old cows was 0.51 ± 0.18 and 0.26 ± 0.11 for Brahman and Tropical Composite, respectively. Heritabilities of binary reproductive output traits (conception rate, pregnancy rate, calving rate and weaning rate) from first and second matings were generally moderate to high on the underlying scale. Estimates ranged from 0.15 to 0.69 in Brahman and 0.15 to 0.34 in Tropical Composite, but were considerably lower when expressed on the observed scale, particularly for those traits with high mean levels. Heritabilities of lifetime reproduction traits were low, with estimates of 0.11 ± 0.06 and 0.07 ± 0.06 for lifetime annual weaning rate in Brahman and Tropical Composite, respectively. Significant differences in mean reproductive performance were observed between the two genotypes, especially for traits associated with anoestrus in first-lactation cows. Genetic correlations between early-in-life reproductive measures and lifetime reproduction traits were moderate to high. Genetic correlations between lactation anoestrous interval and lifetime annual weaning rate were -0.62 ± 0.24 in Brahman and -0.87 ± 0.32 in Tropical Composite. The results emphasise the substantial opportunity that exists to genetically improve weaning rates in tropical beef cattle breeds by focusing recording and selection on early-in-life female reproduction traits, particularly in Brahman for traits associated with lactation anoestrus. - PublicationGenetic variation in growth, hormonal and seminal traits of young tropically adapted bulls(Association for the Advancement of Animal Breeding and Genetics (AAABG), 2009)
;Corbet, N J ;Burns, B M ;Corbert, D H; ;Crisp, J M ;McGowan, M R ;Prayaga, K C ;Venus, B KHolroyd, R GExcept for scrotal circumference there is little published information on the genetic variation of traits measured on young tropical breed bulls. The current study assesses growth, hormonal and seminal traits measured in Brahman and tropical Composite bulls (n=2212) from weaning through to 2 years. Heritability of scrotal size (39 to 75%), prepubertal serum concentration of inhibin (40 to 71%) and semen quality traits (19 to 27%) indicated potential to genetically improve these traits in both Brahman and tropical Composite populations. Genetic correlations between male traits varied (-46 to 78%), some suggesting antagonism between traits while others indicated that some traits measured in bulls early in life could potentially be indicators of post-pubertal semen quality. - PublicationGenetic variation in adaptive traits of cattle in north Australia(Association for the Advancement of Animal Breeding and Genetics (AAABG), 2007)
;Corbet, N J ;Prayaga, K C; Adaptation to environmental stressors is of particular importance for cattle breeders in tropical regions of northern Australia. Various studies have estimated the genetic parameters for adaptive traits measured in northern Australian cattle herds, but most were specific to regions and breeds. The current study assesses adaptability measures of both Brahman and Composite cattle (n=2071) raised in four distinct environments of northern Australia. Heritabilities for tick score, worm egg count, buffalo-fly lesion score, rectal temperature, coat score, flight time, navel score and colour score ranged from 0.12 to 0.70. The heritability of most traits indicated potential to genetically improve these traits in both Composite and Brahman populations. - PublicationThe genetics of cow growth and body composition at first calving in two tropical beef genotypes(CSIRO Publishing, 2014)
; ; ; ;Corbet, N JWilliams, P JThe genetics of cow growth and body composition traits, measured before first calving (pre-calving: in females before calving following their first 3-month annual mating period, at an average age of 34 months) and at the start of the subsequent mating period (Mating 2: on average 109 days later), were evaluated in 1016 Brahman (BRAH) and 1094 Tropical Composite (TCOMP) cows. Measurements analysed were liveweight, ultrasound-scanned measurements of P8 and 12/13th rib fat depth and eye muscle area, body condition score and hip height. Traits describing the change in these from pre-calving to Mating 2 were also included in the analysis. The maternal genetic component of weaning weight was estimated from weaning-weight records on these cows, their steer half-sibs and their progeny generated from up to six matings (n = 12 528). Within pregnant cows at pre-calving, BRAH were significantly lighter, leaner at the P8 site and taller than their TCOMP contemporaries, and these differences were also significant at Mating 2. There was a genetic basis for variation in growth and body composition traits measured at pre-calving and Mating 2 in BRAH (h² = 0.27-0.67) and TCOMP (h² = 0.25-0.87). Traits describing the change from pre-calving to Mating 2 were also moderately heritable for both genotypes (h² = 0.17-0.54), except for change in hip height (h² = 0.00 and 0.10 for BRAH and TCOMP, respectively). Genetic correlations between measurements of the same trait at pre-calving and Mating 2 were consistently positive and strong (rg = 0.75-0.98) and similar for both genotypes. In lactating cows, genetic correlations of growth and body composition traits with their change from pre-calving to Mating 2 showed that when animals had low levels of P8 and rib fat at Mating 2, change in eye muscle area was an important descriptor of genetic body condition score (rg = 0.63). This was supported by moderate genetic relationships, which suggested that lactating cows that were genetically predisposed to lose less eye muscle area were those that ended the period with higher P8 fat (rg = 0.66), rib fat (rg = 0.72) and body condition score (rg = 0.61). Change in liveweight, body condition score and, in particular, eye muscle area was significantly related to the maternal genetic component of weaning weight (rg = from -0.40 to -0.85) in both genotypes, suggesting that cows with higher genetic milk-production potential were those with the propensity for greater loss of these traits over the period from pre-calving to Mating 2. These results showed that for tropically adapted cows, the change in eye muscle area from pre-calving to Mating 2 was a more important descriptor of body condition at Mating 2 than was change in fat depth, and that higher genetic milk-production potential, measured as maternal weaning weight, was genetically related to higher mobilisation of muscle, and therefore body condition, over this period. - PublicationGenetic analyses of heifer adaptive traits and their relation to growth, pubertal and carcass traits in two tropical beef cattle genotypes(CSIRO Publishing, 2009)
;Prayaga, K C ;Corbet, N J; ; ;Fordyce, GGenetic analyses of tropical adaptive traits were conducted for two tropically adapted genotypes, Brahman (BRAH) and Tropical Composite (TCOMP). Traits included tick scores (TICK), faecal egg counts (EPG), buffalo fly-lesion scores (FLY), rectal temperatures under hot conditions (TEMP), coat scores (COAT), coat colour on a light to dark scale (COLOUR), navel scores (NAVEL) and temperament measured as flight time (FT). The data comprised adaptive measures recorded at specific times on 2071 heifers comprising 966 BRAH and 1105 TCOMP. The genetic correlations of these adaptive traits with heifer growth, scanned carcass, pubertal measures and steer growth and carcass traits were estimated. BRAH recorded significantly (P < 0.05) lower TICK, EPG, FLY and TEMPthan did TCOMP.BRAHalso had significantly sleeker coats, lighter coat colour, more pendulous navels and more docile temperament than did TCOMP. The heritability of TICK and FLY was low (<20%), that of EPG, TEMP, NAVEL and FT was moderate (20–50%) and that of COAT and COLOUR high (>50%). In general, phenotypic correlations between these adaptive traits were low and genetic correlations were non-significant, implying trait independence. Genetic correlations between EPG and weight traits (0.29 to 0.44) indicated a positive relationship, implying no deleterious effect of worms on the growth at a genetic level, especially in TCOMP. The negative genetic correlations between COAT and body-condition score across genotypes (–0.33 to –0.48) indicated genetic advantage of sleek coats in tropics. A positive genetic correlation between COAT and the age at the first observed corpus luteum (0.73) in BRAH indicated that BRAH with sleeker coats were genetically early maturing. Further, sleeker coats were genetically indicative of lower weights and lower fat cover at puberty in BRAH. The scanned fat measures at rump and rib sites for feedlot steers showed strong genetic correlation (0.50–0.58) with heifer TEMP,indicating genetically fatter animals had genetically lower heat tolerance. In BRAH, a positive genetic association between heifer COLOUR and scanned fat measures in steers (0.50–0.54) implied increased fatness in genetically darker animals. Further, in BRAH, a strong negative genetic correlation (–0.97) was observed between steer retail beef yield and heifer TEMP, indicating a favourable genetic association. In general, genetic correlations between adaptive traits and other economic traits were genotype specific. Further, it can be concluded that selection for productive and pubertal traits in tropical beef cattle genotypes would not adversely affect their tropical adaptability. - PublicationMale traits and herd reproductive capability in tropical beef cattle. 1. Experimental design and animal measures(CSIRO Publishing, 2013)
;Burns, B M ;Corbet, N J ;Corbet, D H ;Crisp, J M ;Venus, B K; ;Li, Y ;McGowan, M RHolroyd, R GResearch into the genetics of whole herd profitability has been a focus of the Beef Cooperative Research Centre for Beef Genetic Technologies over the past decade and it has been identified that measures of male reproduction may offer a potential indirect means of selecting for improved female reproduction. This paper describes the experimental design and provides a descriptive analysis of an array of male traits in Brahman and Tropical Composite genotypes managed under the medium to high stress, semi-extensive to extensive production systems of northern Australia. A total of 1639 Brahman and 2424 Tropical Composite bulls with known pedigrees, bred and raised in northern Australia, were evaluated for a comprehensive range of productive and reproductive traits. These included blood hormonal traits (luteinising hormone, inhibin and insulin-like growth factor-I); growth and carcass traits (liveweight, body condition score, ultrasound scanned 12-13th rib fat, rump P8 fat, eye muscle area and hip height); adaptation traits (flight time and rectal temperature); and a bull breeding soundness evaluation (leg and hoof conformation, sheath score, length of everted prepuce, penile anatomy, scrotal circumference, semen mass activity, sperm motility and sperm morphology). Large phenotypic variation was evident for most traits, with complete overlap between genotypes, indicating that there is likely to be a significant opportunity to improve bull fertility traits through management and bull selection. - PublicationMale traits and herd reproductive capability in tropical beef cattle. 2. Genetic parameters of bull traits(CSIRO Publishing, 2013)
;Corbet, N J ;Burns, B M; ; ;Corbet, D H ;Venus, B K ;Li, Y ;McGowan, M RHolroyd, R GA total of 4063 young bulls of two tropical genotypes (1639 Brahman and 2424 Tropical Composite) raised in northern Australia were evaluated for a comprehensive range of production and reproduction traits up to 24 months of age. Prior to weaning, peripheral blood concentrations of luteinising hormone (LH) and inhibin were measured at 4 months of age. At weaning (6 months) blood insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-I) and flight time were recorded. Body composition traits of fat depth and eye-muscle area were determined by ultrasonography at 15 months of age when additional measurements of live weight, hip height and body condition score were recorded. Bull breeding soundness was evaluated at ~ 12, 18 and 24 months of age when measurements of scrotal circumference, sheath score, semen mass activity, progressive motility of individual sperm and percent morphologically normal sperm were recorded. Magnitude of heritability and genetic correlations changed across time for some traits. Heritability of LH, inhibin, IGF-I and of 18-month scrotal circumference, mass activity, progressive motility and percent normal sperm was 0.31, 0.74, 0.44, 0.75, 0.24, 0.15 and 0.25, respectively, for Brahmans and 0.48, 0.72, 0.36, 0.43, 0.13, 0.15 and 0.20, respectively, for Tropical Composites. Inhibin and IGF-I had moderate genetic association with percent normal sperm at 24 months in Brahmans but low to negligible associations in Tropical Composites. Body condition score in Brahmans and sperm motility (mass and individual) traits in both genotypes had moderate to strong genetic correlation with percent normal sperm and may prove useful candidates for indirect selection. There is scope to increase scrotal circumference by selection and this will be associated with favourable correlated responses of improved semen quality in both genotypes. The lack of genetic antagonism among bull traits indicates that selection for improved semen quality will not adversely affect other production traits.