Review: Deciphering animal robustness. A synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and management

As the environments in which livestock are reared become more variable, animal robustness becomes an increasingly valuable attribute. Consequently, there is increasing focus on managing and breeding for it. However, robustness is a difficult phenotype to properly characterise because it is a complex...

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Main Authors: N.C. Friggens, F. Blanc, D.P. Berry, L. Puillet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2017-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S175173111700088X
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spelling doaj-d3da32ae8b304113b56bc22a33301c3e2021-06-06T04:53:26ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112017-01-01111222372251Review: Deciphering animal robustness. A synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and managementN.C. Friggens0F. Blanc1D.P. Berry2L. Puillet3UMR 0791 Modélisation Systémique Appliquée aux Ruminants, INRA, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, 75005 Paris, FranceINRA, UMR 1213 Herbivores, 63122 Saint Genès Champanelle, France; Clermont Université, VetAgro Sup, UMR 1213 Herbivores, 63000 Clermont-Ferrand, FranceAnimal & Grassland Research and Innovation Centre, Teagasc, Moorepark, Fermoy, P61 P302 Co. Cork, IrelandUMR 0791 Modélisation Systémique Appliquée aux Ruminants, INRA, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, 75005 Paris, FranceAs the environments in which livestock are reared become more variable, animal robustness becomes an increasingly valuable attribute. Consequently, there is increasing focus on managing and breeding for it. However, robustness is a difficult phenotype to properly characterise because it is a complex trait composed of multiple components, including dynamic elements such as the rates of response to, and recovery from, environmental perturbations. In this review, the following definition of robustness is used: the ability, in the face of environmental constraints, to carry on doing the various things that the animal needs to do to favour its future ability to reproduce. The different elements of this definition are discussed to provide a clearer understanding of the components of robustness. The implications for quantifying robustness are that there is no single measure of robustness but rather that it is the combination of multiple and interacting component mechanisms whose relative value is context dependent. This context encompasses both the prevailing environment and the prevailing selection pressure. One key issue for measuring robustness is to be clear on the use to which the robustness measurements will employed. If the purpose is to identify biomarkers that may be useful for molecular phenotyping or genotyping, the measurements should focus on the physiological mechanisms underlying robustness. However, if the purpose of measuring robustness is to quantify the extent to which animals can adapt to limiting conditions then the measurements should focus on the life functions, the trade-offs between them and the animal’s capacity to increase resource acquisition. The time-related aspect of robustness also has important implications. Single time-point measurements are of limited value because they do not permit measurement of responses to (and recovery from) environmental perturbations. The exception being single measurements of the accumulated consequence of a good (or bad) adaptive capacity, such as productive longevity and lifetime efficiency. In contrast, repeated measurements over time have a high potential for quantification of the animal’s ability to cope with environmental challenges. Thus, we should be able to quantify differences in adaptive capacity from the data that are increasingly becoming available with the deployment of automated monitoring technology on farm. The challenge for future management and breeding will be how to combine various proxy measures to obtain reliable estimates of robustness components in large populations. A key aspect for achieving this is to define phenotypes from consideration of their biological properties and not just from available measures.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S175173111700088Xresiliencegenotype-by-environmentreproductionsustainabilitytrade-offs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N.C. Friggens
F. Blanc
D.P. Berry
L. Puillet
spellingShingle N.C. Friggens
F. Blanc
D.P. Berry
L. Puillet
Review: Deciphering animal robustness. A synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and management
Animal
resilience
genotype-by-environment
reproduction
sustainability
trade-offs
author_facet N.C. Friggens
F. Blanc
D.P. Berry
L. Puillet
author_sort N.C. Friggens
title Review: Deciphering animal robustness. A synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and management
title_short Review: Deciphering animal robustness. A synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and management
title_full Review: Deciphering animal robustness. A synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and management
title_fullStr Review: Deciphering animal robustness. A synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and management
title_full_unstemmed Review: Deciphering animal robustness. A synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and management
title_sort review: deciphering animal robustness. a synthesis to facilitate its use in livestock breeding and management
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2017-01-01
description As the environments in which livestock are reared become more variable, animal robustness becomes an increasingly valuable attribute. Consequently, there is increasing focus on managing and breeding for it. However, robustness is a difficult phenotype to properly characterise because it is a complex trait composed of multiple components, including dynamic elements such as the rates of response to, and recovery from, environmental perturbations. In this review, the following definition of robustness is used: the ability, in the face of environmental constraints, to carry on doing the various things that the animal needs to do to favour its future ability to reproduce. The different elements of this definition are discussed to provide a clearer understanding of the components of robustness. The implications for quantifying robustness are that there is no single measure of robustness but rather that it is the combination of multiple and interacting component mechanisms whose relative value is context dependent. This context encompasses both the prevailing environment and the prevailing selection pressure. One key issue for measuring robustness is to be clear on the use to which the robustness measurements will employed. If the purpose is to identify biomarkers that may be useful for molecular phenotyping or genotyping, the measurements should focus on the physiological mechanisms underlying robustness. However, if the purpose of measuring robustness is to quantify the extent to which animals can adapt to limiting conditions then the measurements should focus on the life functions, the trade-offs between them and the animal’s capacity to increase resource acquisition. The time-related aspect of robustness also has important implications. Single time-point measurements are of limited value because they do not permit measurement of responses to (and recovery from) environmental perturbations. The exception being single measurements of the accumulated consequence of a good (or bad) adaptive capacity, such as productive longevity and lifetime efficiency. In contrast, repeated measurements over time have a high potential for quantification of the animal’s ability to cope with environmental challenges. Thus, we should be able to quantify differences in adaptive capacity from the data that are increasingly becoming available with the deployment of automated monitoring technology on farm. The challenge for future management and breeding will be how to combine various proxy measures to obtain reliable estimates of robustness components in large populations. A key aspect for achieving this is to define phenotypes from consideration of their biological properties and not just from available measures.
topic resilience
genotype-by-environment
reproduction
sustainability
trade-offs
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S175173111700088X
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