Genetic and environmental dissection of short and long-term social aggression in pigs
dc.contributor.advisor
Roehe, Rainer
en
dc.contributor.advisor
Wilson, Andrea
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dc.contributor.advisor
Ennos, Richard
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dc.contributor.author
Desire, Suzanne
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dc.contributor.sponsor
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
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dc.date.accessioned
2017-02-20T10:39:45Z
dc.date.available
2017-02-20T10:39:45Z
dc.date.issued
2016-06-28
dc.description.abstract
It is common for pigs to engage in physical aggression when mixed into new social
groups, in order to establish dominance relationships. Phenotyping aggression is time
consuming, however skin lesions resulting from physical aggression are quick to
record, are genetically correlated with aggressive behavioural traits, and have low to
moderate heritability (0.19 to 0.43). Reducing aggression via selection on skin lesion
traits would provide a socially acceptable, long-term solution to the problem. Barriers
to implementing selection against skin lesions lie in the lack of understanding
regarding the underlying genetic basis of aggression, and its relationship with other
behaviour and production traits. This thesis has focused on dissecting the phenotypic
and genetic relationship between skin lesions recorded 24 hours after mixing (SL24h),
and either 3 or 5 weeks later (SL3wk/SL5wk, respectively), with aggression performed
at mixing, and several production traits. Chapter 2 provided evidence of a potential
trade-off between involvement in aggression upon first mixing, and receipt of
aggressive attacks several weeks after mixing. In particular, animals that avoid
aggression at mixing had the highest fresh skin lesion numbers at 3 weeks. This
suggests that reciprocal fighting at mixing may be beneficial for long-term group social
stability. It also suggests that it may be possible to phenotype the least aggressive
individuals in a group using SL3wk. In Chapter 3, I quantified the magnitude of
reduction in complex aggressive behavioural traits when using SL24h or SL3wk as
selection criteria, to identify the optimum skin lesion trait for selection purposes. The
results of Chapter 3 provided evidence that selection against anterior SL24h would
result in the greatest genetic and phenotypic reduction in aggressive behaviour
recorded at mixing. Although there is evidence that selection for increased SL3wk
would reduce aggression at mixing, current understanding of aggressive behaviour under stable group conditions is insufficient to recommend using this trait for selection
purposes. Chapter 4, presented genetic associations between skin lesion traits as a
measure of short- and long-term aggression, and commonly used commercial
performance measures: growth, feed intake, feed efficiency, and carcass traits. The
results suggested that, genetically, animals that receive many lesions show improved
performance compared to those with few lesions, except for anterior SL24h, which
have been shown to be genetically positively correlated with the initiation of nonreciprocal
attacks. The aim of Chapter 5, was to determine whether skin lesion traits
are phenotypically or genetically associated with behavioural measures of fearfulness.
As found in Chapter 4, there was some evidence of an association between SL5wk and
the traits, however this was not the case for anterior SL24h. For the 6th and final
Chapter, we used skin lesion data from 1,840 pigs to perform genome wide association
studies (GWAS), which detected a single SNP significantly associated with SL5wk on a
genome wide level, as well as several SNPs associated with both SL24h and SL5wk on a
chromosome wide level.
en
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/20383
dc.language.iso
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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dc.relation.hasversion
S Desire, S P Turner, R B D’Eath, A B Doeschl-Wilson, C R G Lewis, R Roehe. 2015 Analysis of the phenotypic link between behavioural traits at mixing and increased long-term social stability in group-housed pigs. Appl. Anim. Behav. Sci. 166: 52-62
en
dc.relation.hasversion
S Desire, S P Turner, R B D’Eath, A B Doeschl-Wilson, C R G Lewis, R Roehe. 2015 Genetic associations of short- and long-term aggressiveness identified by skin lesion with growth, feed efficiency and carcass characteristics in growing pigs. J. Anim. Sci. 93: 3303-3312.
en
dc.relation.hasversion
S Desire, S P Turner, R B D’Eath, A B Doeschl-Wilson, C R G Lewis, R Roehe. 2016 Predicting the response of aggressive behaviour in growing pigs using skin lesion traits as selection criteria. Animal. 9:1-11.
en
dc.relation.hasversion
S Desire, S P Turner, R B D’Eath, A B Doeschl-Wilson, C R G Lewis, R Roehe. Increased aggression at mixing results in fewer injuries in stable social groups. Book of abstracts of the Annual Conference of British Society of Animal Science (BSAS), 29th – 30th April, 2014. Abstract 136.
en
dc.relation.hasversion
S Desire, S P Turner, R B D’Eath, A B Doeschl-Wilson, C R G Lewis, R Roehe. Analysis of the phenotypic link between aggression at mixing and long-term social stability in groups of pigs. Proceedings of the 48th Congress of the International Society for Applied Ethology (ISAE), 29th July – 2nd August
en
dc.relation.hasversion
S Desire, S P Turner, R B D’Eath, A B Doeschl-Wilson, C R G Lewis, R Roehe. Genetic analysis of skin lesion traits in pigs and their relationships with growth traits. Book of abstracts of the 10th World Congress on Genetics Applied to Livestock Production (WCGALP), 17th – 22nd August 2014. Abstract 364.
en
dc.relation.hasversion
S Desire, S P Turner, R B D’Eath, A B Doeschl-Wilson, C R G Lewis, R Roehe. (2015). Quantifying the response of aggressive behaviour in growing pigs to selection via skin lesion traits. Book of abstracts of the Annual Conference of British Society of Animal Science (BSAS), 13th – 14th April, 2015. Abstract 149.
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dc.subject
pigs
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dc.subject
aggression
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dc.subject
genetics
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dc.subject
skin lesions
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dc.title
Genetic and environmental dissection of short and long-term social aggression in pigs
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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