Author:
Smith K. F.,Rebetzke G. J.,Eagles H. A.,Anderson M. W.,Easton H. S.
Abstract
Grass tetany is a common metabolic disorder of ruminants in southern
Australia. To investigate the genetic control of mineral concentrations
leading to this disorder, replicate populations of perennial ryegrass half-sib
families were grown at Hamilton and Timboon in southern Australia. Variation
in herbage yield, and Mg, P, K, Ca, Na, Cl, S, Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn, and
K/(Mg+Ca) (tetany ratio) concentrations in the herbage of these
families was measured in the early spring of 1994. Large environmental effects
on herbage mineral concentration were detected, with location differences
accounting for 60–80% of the total variance. Both the mean and
range for mineral concentration were similar for each population. As expected,
Mg, Ca, and K were significantly correlated with tetany ratio; however, the
concentrations of other minerals were not consistently associated with tetany
ratio. Tetany ratio and Mg showed a negative genetic correlation in both
groups. The genetic correlation for tetany ratio with K or Ca was less
repeatable across groups. Significant family variance components
(σ2f) were detected for
yield, Mg, Ca, K, and tetany ratio, and narrow-sense heritabilities for these
traits were moderate to high (h2 =
0·46–0·81). However, family location interactions were
also significant, with σ2fl
often >σ2f. A large
proportion of the family location interaction for K and Mg concentration was
associated with non-rank family changes indicating that family selection for
low K or high Mg concentration would be effective across environments.
However, family × location effects for Ca and tetany ratio were
associated with substantial rank changes across locations. Selection for
increased Mg concentration would appear the most suitable strategy for
reducing the tetany ratio of perennial ryegrass, with possibly different
cultivars required for the environments represented by Hamilton and Timboon.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
18 articles.
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