Exploration of the Exogenous Male Yak Introduction
Breeding Model and its Effects on Tibetan Small-Sized Family Farms
Basang Wang-Dui1,
Zhu Yan-Bin1, Pingcuo Zhan-Dui1, Luosang
Dun-Zhu1, Cidan Yang-Ji1, DawaYang-La1,
Sun Guang-Ming1 and E Guang-Xin2*
1Institute
of Animal Husbandry and Veterinary Medicine, Tibet Academy of
Agriculture and Animal Husbandry Science, Lhasa 850000, China;
2College of Animal Science and Technology, Southwest
University, Chongqing 400415, China
*Corresponding author:
eguangxin@126.com
Abstract
A total of three family farms including Village
No. 9 in Nima township, Nerong Naqu County (NQA); Village No. 11 in Nima
township, Nerong Naqu County (NQB); and Yare township, Gegi County, Ali District
(GJ) from three ecology yak populations (EYP) were selected for this study to
identify the most optimized mode of exogenous male adult yak introduction (EMI)
within EYP for solving the inbreeding problem caused by the small-scale yak
husbandry system. Exogenous adult male yaks from the same EYP with different
proportions (100% to NQA, 50% to NQB, and 0% to GJ) were introduced, and 10
microsatellites were used to detect the genetic diversity of these populations
before (in 2017) and after (in 2019) the introduction of exogenous adult male
yaks (EMI). Results showed that the divergence between the observed and the
expected heterozygosity of the NQA and NQB populations was reduced in 2019,
while the number of markers significantly deviating from Hardy–Weinberg
equilibrium (P<0.05) and
FIS (inbreeding coefficient) within populations decreased
compared with that in 2017. In contrast, the
FIS of GJ population
without EMI continued to increase (from 0.011 to 0.033) over the years 2017 to
2019. Moreover, genetic differences between the populations (Pairwise Fixation index, FST) showed that EMI increased the genetic divergence
between populations. Overall, this study shows that the introduction of
exogenous male adult yaks not only effectively reduces the degree of population
deviation from equilibrium but also decreases the inbreeding level within the
population within a few generations. This study also provides a valuable
management model for stable yak production on small sized family farms.
To Cite This Article: Wang-Dui B, Yan-Bin Z,
Zhan-Dui P, Dun-Zhu L, Yang-Ji C, Yang-La D, Guang-Ming S, and E Guang-Xin, 2021.
Exploration of the exogenous male yak introduction breeding model and its
effects on tibetan small-sized family farms. Pak Vet J, 41(1): 137-141.
http://dx.doi.org/10.29261/pakvetj/2020.096