Correlative variation of economically valuable traits in South Kazakh Merino

Abstract Fine-fleeced sheep are distinguished by numerous economically valuable traits that constitute the foundation for productive distinctions among breeds, populations, lines, and individuals. Many of these traits have already been mentioned or thoroughly examined during studies on the correlati...

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Main Authors: B. Kulzhanova, A. Ombayev, N. Azhimetov, Zh. Parzhanov, K. Khamzin, N. Yegemkulov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Instituto Internacional de Ecologia 2024-02-01
Series:Brazilian Journal of Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842024000100488&lng=en&tlng=en
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author B. Kulzhanova
A. Ombayev
N. Azhimetov
Zh. Parzhanov
K. Khamzin
N. Yegemkulov
author_facet B. Kulzhanova
A. Ombayev
N. Azhimetov
Zh. Parzhanov
K. Khamzin
N. Yegemkulov
author_sort B. Kulzhanova
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Fine-fleeced sheep are distinguished by numerous economically valuable traits that constitute the foundation for productive distinctions among breeds, populations, lines, and individuals. Many of these traits have already been mentioned or thoroughly examined during studies on the correlative variability of productivity indicators, blood parameters, characteristics of pulmonary gas exchange, histological structures of the skin, and features of the experimental sheep's coat. The objective of our research was to investigate the correlative variability of key economically valuable traits that characterize the overall functional state of sheep organisms under varying environmental conditions. The study was conducted at the “Sharbulak” breeding farms and the “Samat” peasant farms in the Kazygurt district of the Turkestan region. Our findings reveal that one-year-old rams surpass ewes in terms of live weight by 32-37% and in terms of unwashed wool shearing by 21-23%. Two-year-old rams outperform ewes in live weight by 2.15-2.17 times and in unwashed wool shearing by 2.38-2.44 times. The highest phenotypic variability in relative terms (as indicated by the coefficient of variation) is observed in the shearing of pure wool, with an average coefficient of variation of 18.1% across all sex and age groups of sheep. This is followed by the wool coefficient (17.4%) and the yield of pure fiber (12.5%). For each group of animals, the most substantial phenotypic correlation coefficients were observed between the live weight of sheep and the shearing of unwashed wool. On average, across all groups of sheep at the “Sharbulak” breeding farm, this phenotypic correlation reaches +0.411 ± 0.077. Correspondingly, for the sheep herd at the “Samat” peasant farm, it is +0.326 ± 0.075. The second-highest phenotypic correlation pertains to the cut of unwashed wool and the length of wool (with correlation coefficients of +0.156 ± 0.058 and +0.145 ± 0.057, respectively, for the herds). The third-highest correlation involves live weight and wool length (+0.131 ± 0.085 and +0.105 ± 0.078, respectively). No statistically significant differences were identified in the average correlation coefficients between the live weight of sheep, the shearing of unwashed wool, and the length of the staple among the flocks of sheep at the “Sharbulak” breeding farm and the “Samat” peasant farm.
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spelling doaj.art-fdc23d585f834793b5f16857384e5e642024-02-27T07:41:50ZengInstituto Internacional de EcologiaBrazilian Journal of Biology1678-43752024-02-018410.1590/1519-6984.278879Correlative variation of economically valuable traits in South Kazakh MerinoB. Kulzhanovahttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7266-8566A. Ombayevhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-1347-6249N. Azhimetovhttps://orcid.org/0000-0003-0733-0320Zh. Parzhanovhttps://orcid.org/0009-0000-5646-2421K. Khamzinhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-6523-6335N. Yegemkulovhttps://orcid.org/0009-0005-0066-9104Abstract Fine-fleeced sheep are distinguished by numerous economically valuable traits that constitute the foundation for productive distinctions among breeds, populations, lines, and individuals. Many of these traits have already been mentioned or thoroughly examined during studies on the correlative variability of productivity indicators, blood parameters, characteristics of pulmonary gas exchange, histological structures of the skin, and features of the experimental sheep's coat. The objective of our research was to investigate the correlative variability of key economically valuable traits that characterize the overall functional state of sheep organisms under varying environmental conditions. The study was conducted at the “Sharbulak” breeding farms and the “Samat” peasant farms in the Kazygurt district of the Turkestan region. Our findings reveal that one-year-old rams surpass ewes in terms of live weight by 32-37% and in terms of unwashed wool shearing by 21-23%. Two-year-old rams outperform ewes in live weight by 2.15-2.17 times and in unwashed wool shearing by 2.38-2.44 times. The highest phenotypic variability in relative terms (as indicated by the coefficient of variation) is observed in the shearing of pure wool, with an average coefficient of variation of 18.1% across all sex and age groups of sheep. This is followed by the wool coefficient (17.4%) and the yield of pure fiber (12.5%). For each group of animals, the most substantial phenotypic correlation coefficients were observed between the live weight of sheep and the shearing of unwashed wool. On average, across all groups of sheep at the “Sharbulak” breeding farm, this phenotypic correlation reaches +0.411 ± 0.077. Correspondingly, for the sheep herd at the “Samat” peasant farm, it is +0.326 ± 0.075. The second-highest phenotypic correlation pertains to the cut of unwashed wool and the length of wool (with correlation coefficients of +0.156 ± 0.058 and +0.145 ± 0.057, respectively, for the herds). The third-highest correlation involves live weight and wool length (+0.131 ± 0.085 and +0.105 ± 0.078, respectively). No statistically significant differences were identified in the average correlation coefficients between the live weight of sheep, the shearing of unwashed wool, and the length of the staple among the flocks of sheep at the “Sharbulak” breeding farm and the “Samat” peasant farm.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842024000100488&lng=en&tlng=ensheepcorrelationvariabilityunwashed wool shearingwool lengthlive weightpure fiber yieldpure wool shearingcoefficient of variationwooliness coefficient
spellingShingle B. Kulzhanova
A. Ombayev
N. Azhimetov
Zh. Parzhanov
K. Khamzin
N. Yegemkulov
Correlative variation of economically valuable traits in South Kazakh Merino
Brazilian Journal of Biology
sheep
correlation
variability
unwashed wool shearing
wool length
live weight
pure fiber yield
pure wool shearing
coefficient of variation
wooliness coefficient
title Correlative variation of economically valuable traits in South Kazakh Merino
title_full Correlative variation of economically valuable traits in South Kazakh Merino
title_fullStr Correlative variation of economically valuable traits in South Kazakh Merino
title_full_unstemmed Correlative variation of economically valuable traits in South Kazakh Merino
title_short Correlative variation of economically valuable traits in South Kazakh Merino
title_sort correlative variation of economically valuable traits in south kazakh merino
topic sheep
correlation
variability
unwashed wool shearing
wool length
live weight
pure fiber yield
pure wool shearing
coefficient of variation
wooliness coefficient
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1519-69842024000100488&lng=en&tlng=en
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AT nazhimetov correlativevariationofeconomicallyvaluabletraitsinsouthkazakhmerino
AT zhparzhanov correlativevariationofeconomicallyvaluabletraitsinsouthkazakhmerino
AT kkhamzin correlativevariationofeconomicallyvaluabletraitsinsouthkazakhmerino
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