Pregnancy loss is recognized as one of the major factors contributing to poor reproductive performance in dairy cattle. Here, we performed a comprehensive genetic analysis of fetal loss, defined as… Click to show full abstract
Pregnancy loss is recognized as one of the major factors contributing to poor reproductive performance in dairy cattle. Here, we performed a comprehensive genetic analysis of fetal loss, defined as a pregnancy loss that occurs after detection of a viable embryo around 42 d of gestation. The objectives of this study were to reveal (1) whether fetal loss is heritable and, hence, whether it will respond to selection, and (2) to what extent current fertility traits, such as daughter pregnancy rate, are associated with fetal loss. Data consisted of 59,308 confirmed pregnancy or fetal loss records distributed across nulliparous heifers and primiparous and multiparous cows. We defined fetal loss as a binary trait (yes vs. no) or as an ordinal trait (pregnancy maintenance, early fetal loss ≤150 d of gestation, and late fetal loss >150 d of gestation), and we assessed both linear and threshold models. Heritability estimates for fetal loss ranged from 1 to 18%, depending upon parity, trait definition, and statistical model used. Heritability estimates were greater for lactating cows than for nonlactating nulliparous heifers. Threshold models were able to capture more additive genetic variance and, thus, yielded higher heritability estimates than linear models. Notably, fetal loss traits were highly genetically correlated with each other but only weakly correlated with current fertility traits included in the national genetic evaluation. Overall, our study provides evidence that fetal loss is heritable enough to make genetic selection for reducing fetal loss and improving pregnancy maintenance feasible. In addition, our results suggest that fetal loss is largely independent from current traits used to select for cow fertility, and thus current breeding efforts have unfortunately little effect on reducing the incidence of fetal loss.
               
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