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Genetic differentiation between ‘Araucana’ creole and ‘Hampshire Down’ sheeps in Chile
Bravo, Silvana; Larama, Giovanni; Ortíz, Manuel & Sepúlveda, Néstor
Abstract
Genetic diversity studies in domestic animals allow evaluating genetic variation within and among breeds mainly for
conservation purposes. In Chile exist isolated recovery programs, conservation and characterization of animal genetic
resources, a consequence of which the vast majority of them have not been characterized, poorly used, and some of them
have become extinct. The aim of this research was to determine genetic diversity and relationship between ‘Araucana’
creole and ‘Hampshire Down’ sheeps based on microsatellite markers; sheep breeds with similar phenotypic characteristics,
raised in the south of Chile. A total of 64 ‘Araucana’ sheep (‘Araucana’ from Freire, AF: 27, ‘Araucana’ from Padre Las
Casas, AP: 10, ‘Araucana’ from Chol Chol, AC: 15, ‘Araucana’ from Villarrica, AV: 12) and 43 ‘Hampshire Down’ sheep
(‘Hampshire’ from Marchigue, HM: 18, ‘Hampshire’ from Valdivia, HV: 11, ‘Hampshire’ from San José, HS: 14) were
analyzed using 17 microsatellite markers for determine the genetic diversity and relationship between breeds. A total of
284 alleles were observed with average polymorphic information content equal to 0.76, showing that the microsatellites
panel used was highly informative. Estimated heterozygosity ranged from 0.73 in ‘Hampshire Down’ to 0.85 in ‘Araucana’.
The low inbreeding or endogamy coefficient (FIS, 0.022) and total inbreeding estimate (FIT, 0.070) indicated low level of
inbreeding within and among breeds. The phylogenetic tree showed a separation between HS and HV, and the other sheep
populations. The results indicated high genetic variability, low inbreeding, and low genetic differentiation, except for HV
and HS, and were in according with geographical location and breeding practices.
Keywords
Breed assignment; creole sheep; genetic variability; microsatellites
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