Abstract
Maternal effects are an important source of variation in early growth and body traits in sheep but are often excluded from genetic analyses. Maternal additive genetic, maternal environmental, and cytoplasmic effects were investigated in a large Suffolk breeding scheme using a range of models involving different combinations of these effects with the direct additive genetic effect. Weights at 8 wk of age and at scanning (mean age 146 d) and ultrasonically measured muscle and fat depth were analyzed using an animal model on 55,683 (8-wk weight) and 28,947 (scanning traits) lamb records. Simple additive models always overestimated the heritability of all traits when compared to more complex models. The successive inclusion of maternal environmental, maternal genetic, and the covariance between direct and maternal additive effects in the model significantly improved the fit for almost all models and all traits, as indicated by a likelihood ratio test. Under the full model, the heritability of both weight traits was low (0.14 and 0.20 for 8-wk and scanning weight, respectively). The maternal additive and maternal environmental effects, as a proportion of the phenotypic variance, were similar (0.10 and 0.08 for 8-wk weight and 0.07 and 0.06 for scanning weight). The two scanning traits had higher heritabilities (0.29 and 0.27 for muscle depth and fat depth, respectively) with low levels of maternal genetic and maternal environmental variance. No evidence was found of a cytoplasmic effect on any of the traits studied under the full model. Breeding schemes for early growth and body traits in sheep should account for maternal effects in their genetic evaluations in order to improve their accuracy. The exact model to use will depend on the trait and individual circumstances of the scheme.