Developing a Breeding Program
By Mike Safley
Pure blood animal breeders around the world crave the ability to
produce the best of their breed. They want their animals to reach
the pinnacle of their potential. That is what animal breeding is
all about: A self dynamic dream. When an alpaca breeder sets his
goals they generally include excellence. No one says, “I want to
mate my female to a stud who will produce an average alpaca, not
a great one.” The difference between producing ideal animals and
mediocre ones is basically a little knowledge and a sound plan or
breeding program.
My dad used to tell me that “an alpaca herd was like a baseball
team” and if we wanted to field a winning team we would need “someone
to hit some home runs.” Your herdsire has to be the big hitter.
The males you choose as sires will contribute 50% of all the genes
in your cria. If you have ten females in your herd any one of them
will contribute only 10% of the genes to your annual crop of cria.
PREPOTENCY
I cannot emphasis enough the importance of selecting for stud males
that have a proven record of producing high quality cria. By using
a potent and proven stud you also have the advantage of creating
a more marketable pedigree for your cria. Strictly speaking prepotency
is the superior power that one parent has over the other in determining
the character of the offspring.
The only way to determine the potency of a male is to inspect its
progeny. If the male’s offspring are uniformly superior then the
male is prepotent. For a thorough discussion of progeny testing
please read Alpacas: Synthesis
of a Miracle and Ideal
Alpaca: From Myth to Reality.
BLOODLINES
Alpaca breeders often look to acquire “bloodlines” by purchasing
animals sired by a wide variety of males. I believe they would make
more progress if they concentrated on purchasing animals sired by
a few prepotent males. By narrowing their selection they would insure
that their herd would be populated by the dominant genes that were
being passed on by superior males. The process of creating superior
animals involves concentrating the herd’s gene pool so that it includes
a maximum number of elite genes and eliminates the inferior genes
from the mix. This should be every alpaca breeder’s goal.
SELECTION
Alpaca breeders can not change Mendel’s laws, alter the number
of genes which make an alpaca, or affect their interrelationship.
They can not change the expression of dominance or the negative
effects of some recessive genes. That leaves only two ways for alpaca
breeders to control the heredity of their animals. First, they select
the alpacas which make up their herd. Second, they decide which
alpaca will mate with each of the alpacas in the herd, and how many
offspring each parent will have.
The second group of decisions they make – selecting whom to breed
to whom and how often – is every bit as important as the breeder’s
initial selection decision. A breeding program integrates your selection
system – how you choose the traits to breed for, and how you choose
the animals you will breed: by pedigree, phenotype, or progeny testing
– and your mating system – choosing which animals to mate to which.
Today, most breeders practice some form of selection when they purchase
and breed their alpacas. However, many of them substitute their
concept of selection for their breeding program. But a breeding
program must be a combination of both careful selection and a well-chosen
mating system.
CREATING A BREEDING PROGRAM
To understand the process of creating a breeding program, study
the following steps:
-
There must be a goal to drive the changes in the animals being
bred. The establishment of a goal for your endeavor is critical.
I farm alpacas with the expectation of a profit. My goal is
to produce animals that I can sell at a profit on an annual
basis. Profit can be viewed in a number of ways: per female,
per labor unit, per acre, or as a percentage of capital invested.
Everyone’s goal might be a little different. Some breeders
may want to produce show animals, some production females; others
might want to produce stud males for sale. One farm’s goals
might include white suris while another would specialize in
colored huacayas. If you do not have a goal or a specific breeding
program any road you take or any breeding you make will get
you there. But I would suggest that if you do not have a goal
for your farm, stop what you are doing and get one!
-
Goals must be translated into breeding objectives. A breeding
objective must include a list of selection traits that will
help you reach your goal. Once you have identified the traits
you are selecting for they must be prioritized. Since one of
my goals is profit, I select for ideal type (See, Ideal
Alpacas: From Myth to Reality.), fine stylish fleeces
and high fleece weights. Type sells, fine fiber is more valuable
and the more of it there is the more the fleece is worth.
Alpacas that have low micron counts sell for more money. Alpacas
with superior type sell for more money and alpacas that have
dense fleeces sell for more money. If I can meet these objectives,
I will meet my goals. A breeder may want to include color or
luster or crimp or size in their objectives. In the end your
breeding program should be driven by objectives that will help
you accomplish your goal.
-
The objective dictates the selection criteria to be used in
your program. The selection criteria I use include low micron,
crimp style, lock structure, brightness and luster, fleece coverage
and density. Finally, I like big bold, well conformed animals.
The average micron count of the American herd is 26.3 to 29
microns for huacaya and 27.1 to 29.8 for microns for suri. (Data
source: Yokum-McColl Testing Laboratories.) I strive to breed
animals that average 21 microns at two years of age and that
stay below 26 microns as they age. I have selected stud males
that produce cria with low average micron counts that tend not
to blow out as they age.
Crimp style is an important selection criterion if your goal
is to raise finer huacaya. My experience tells me alpacas with
8 to 10 crimps per inch tend to be finer fleeced and more uniform.
Animals with broader, less frequent crimp tend to become coarser
as they age. Well crimped huacaya grow bundled staples that
form dense fleeces that cut high weights.
Suri that exhibit tightly twisted locks tend, in my experience,
to be finer and exhibit more luster. The animals with thick
substantial locks tend to be dense. Huacaya and Suri alike are
more valuable in the marketplace if they exhibit leg coverage
and have a typey head. Larger animals have less birthing problems,
tend to carry more fleece and do well in the show ring.
- A breeding scheme must be designed to facilitate the change.
The objective of any breeding program is to facilitate change
in a predetermined direction. The breeder decides which animals
will become parents, how often and with whom. The animal breeder
has arbitrary control over the reproduction process.
You will need to make decisions about who to sell and which
males to geld. You will need to determine which females you
return as replacement stock and which males you reserve as studs.
You may decide to use outside males to service your females.
All of these decisions need to be made with your goal in mind
and with the intent of changing the qualities of your herd until
their characteristics are consistent with your ideal. To do
this you will need to adhere to the principles of genetic change,
selection accuracy, generational interval, selection intensity
and genetic variability. (See below.)
- A mating plan must be established. Once your breeding scheme
is operational and you have selected the animals that you intend
to mate you must settle on a mating plan. There are five animal
mating systems.(Click
here for diagram)
Each of these different plans will have predictable results.
(See Alpacas: Synthesis
of a Miracle.) You will need to choose the system that
will accomplish your purpose and avoid the plans that will hinder
your progress.
Economic analysis must be used to evaluate progress and assure
that the breeding objective is being met. The final step in
the implementation of a breeding program is to evaluate the
results. Is the plan economically feasible? Are you paying too
much for breeding fees or are the animals you create for sale
worth less than the cost to produce them? How long will the
breeding scheme that you have embarked on take to create the
results you expect? You must decide if changes are necessary.
This analysis should be used to sharpen your goals, refine your
objectives and provoke change in the subsequent generations
of cria that you produce.
WHAT QUESTIONS SHOULD A BREEDING PROGRAM ANSWER?
To create an effective breeding program, selection is used to identify
superior animals, and then a specific mating system is used to consolidate
and perpetuate the gains made from selection. Understanding this
relationship, together with a thorough knowledge of how various
mating systems operate, will guide the creation of a breeding program
and allow breeders to answer difficult questions, such as
- Should I use a wide variety of males or a select few?
- Should I use proven older males or unproven younger males?
- How important is pedigree?
- Should I buy replacements or breed them from my herd?
- How many replacement females should I save?
- Should I outcross, line-breed, or mate like-to-like?
- Is corrective mating important?
GENETIC GAIN
A breeder must understand the basic mechanisms of genetic gain
if they want to develop a breeding program to improve their herd.
This knowledge must then be injected into a plan that sets goals,
objectives, uses selection and a sound mating system. Then the results
of the plan must be measured and assessed to determine whether the
original goals are being met.
This is not as difficult as it may seem. Let’s begin with a short
review of what factors drive genetic gain.
There are four basic genetic prerequisites for rapid breed improvement:
1) genetic variability, 2) selection intensity, 3) selection accuracy,
and 4) generational interval. Genetic variation is extremely important
to the rate of gain. The more variation for a particular trait in
a population, the more potential there is for change. If breeders
have a wide variety of animals to choose from–such as those with
high or low fleece weights–they can select alpacas with very different
traits and breed for those traits. If those animals have high breeding
value for the trait, improvement in the herd will be rapid.
Selection accuracy is important if any improvement or gain is to
be made. This means the traits you select for must be heritable.
Accuracy says that we have the ability to separate superior and
inferior animals. If you select for a heritable characteristic,
such as fleece weight, you must identify superior stud males who
historically have produced offspring with higher than average fleece
weights to insure the trait is passed to the offspring. The same
goes for fineness, crimp, staple length, etc.
Breeders should also understand that selection accuracy costs time
and money. The cost to progeny test 10 dairy bulls runs into the
tens of thousands of dollars. Fleece histograms for alpacas are
expensive. And finally, selection accuracy can cost you the time
it takes to assess the animals selected as breeding stock and as
Dr. Dorian Garrick, of Colorado State University says, “Genes don’t
get better with age.”
Selection intensity means being highly selective of the progeny
produced by the high-quality parents you have chosen for foundation
stock, and retaining in your herd only the offspring that exhibit
a superior expression of the heritable qualities for which you are
selecting. This ensures that breeding values will remain high and
that each generation of offspring should improve: The higher the
selection intensity, the higher the rate of genetic gain.
Generational interval affects the rate of genetic change simply
because the more rapidly one generation replaces the previous one,
the faster the potential gain. Mice reproduce more quickly than
humans, producing 150 generations in the time it takes humans to
produce one. (This makes it much easier to effect change in mice
than in humans. And improving people is also a problem because there
is very little culling undertaken.)
Generational interval is determined by the average age of the producing
males and females in a given herd. Alpacas have a generation interval
of four to six years for females and approximately five years for
males, although this interval will vary from herd to herd. The shorter
the interval the faster the gain.
Animal breeding is the process of change. You cannot stand still
and succeed. If you have a herd of females, breed them each year
and sell the offspring your herd will never improve. In this scenario
you are simply a producer or manufacturer, not an animal breeder.
A true breeder spends their waking hours trying to facilitate change
in the direction of their vision. Good luck and may your herd improve
from year to year.
Reproduced with permission from:
Alpaca
Breeding Farm: Northwest Alpacas: raising suri and
huacaya alpacas for sale, alpaca investment, and alpaca business
plans for alpaca breeders and owners worldwide. Find more useful
information at the Alpaca
Library.
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