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Topic:Heritability

Heritability in horses refers to the proportion of observable variation in traits among individuals that can be attributed to genetic factors. It is a key concept in understanding how traits such as height, coat color, speed, and temperament are passed from one generation to the next. Heritability estimates help in predicting the potential for selective breeding and the likelihood of certain traits being expressed in offspring. These estimates are calculated using statistical methods that analyze the resemblance between relatives. This page aggregates peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the genetic basis of heritable traits in horses, the methodologies for estimating heritability, and the implications for equine breeding and management practices.
Standardbred stallion gene transmission for twelve protein systems: evidence for selection in trotters.
Animal genetics    January 1, 1988   Volume 19, Issue 4 317-330 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1988.tb00823.x
Weitkamp LR, MacCluer JW, Guttormsen SA, King RH.The transmission ratios of alleles at 12 protein marker loci were computed individually for American Standardbred stallions in a genealogy of 5392 phenotyped horses. Over all loci there was significant gene transmission distortion for trotting stallions (p = 0.0019) but not for pacing stallions (p = 0.99). The transmission distortion was due to sire-specific effects (p = 0.0024) and not to increased transmission of one or the other allele of a given heterozygous genotype (p = 0.21). Individual-specific, non-random transmission of homologous chromosomes may provide a mechanism for selection to ...
Equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy.
The Veterinary clinics of North America. Equine practice    August 1, 1987   Volume 3, Issue 2 379-383 doi: 10.1016/s0749-0739(17)30680-6
Beech J.This article discusses the history and signalment, clinical signs, differential diagnosis, pathology, etiology and pathogenesis, and treatment and prevention of equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy.
Hereditary multiple exostosis. A comparative human-equine-epidemiologic study.
The Journal of heredity    May 1, 1987   Volume 78, Issue 3 171-177 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a110351
Leone NC, Shupe JL, Gardner EJ, Millar EA, Olson AE, Phillips EC.Hereditary multiple exostosis (HME), a bone tumor first described by Virchow, has been studied over a period of 15 years on a comparative basis. The horse, an excellent biomedical model for this physically deforming multiple bone tumor in man, has been utilized in this study. The etiology, hereditary pattern, potential for malignancy and other aspects of this strange affliction need additional clarification. This in-depth study of 261 individuals from 144 families was compared with that of 55 horses bearing the HME trait, selectively bred and studied over the same period. Important information...
Genetic studies of blood markers in Przewalski’s horses.
The Journal of heredity    March 1, 1987   Volume 78, Issue 2 75-80 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a110340
Bowling AT, Ryder OA.Ninety-six Przewalski's horses (Equus przewalskii) were blood typed using systems of inherited blood variants known to be highly effective for parentage testing of domestic horses (E. caballus). Sixteen red cell antigenic factors detected using sera prepared by alloimmunization of domestic horses were shown to be inherited in six systems (A, C, D, P, Q, and U) and in the same patterns as domestic horses. Family data confirmed autosomal, codominant inheritance at five loci of serum protein variants (Al, Tf, Xk, Pi, and Es) and three loci of red cell proteins (PGM, PHI, and Hb). One serum protei...
Equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy: a vitamin E deficiency that may be familial.
Journal of veterinary internal medicine    January 1, 1987   Volume 1, Issue 1 45-50 doi: 10.1111/j.1939-1676.1987.tb01985.x
Mayhew IG, Brown CM, Stowe HD, Trapp AL, Derksen FJ, Clement SF.Two horse farms, on which there was a high incidence of proven and suspected equine degenerative myeloencephalopathy (EDM), were studied. Symmetric ataxia and paresis, along with laryngeal adductor, cervicofacial, local cervical, and cutaneous trunci hyporeflexia, characterized the syndrome. Serum vitamin E concentration reflected a deficient state in affected and unaffected horses on both farms when compared with selected reference groups and with published values. A high incidence of the disease was evident in offspring of two particular sires on one farm. Vitamin E supplementation resulted ...
Investigation into the heredity of congenital lateral patellar (sub)luxation in the Shetland pony.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1987   Volume 9, Issue 1 1-8 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1987.9694070
Hermans WA, Kersjes AW, van der Mey GJ, Dik KJ.A breeding experiment was carried out in a group of Shetland ponies in order to investigate the heredity of congenital lateral patellar (sub)luxation. A breeding herd was established and consisted of stallions and mares acquired at different times. Some were free from, and others were affected by lateral patellar (sub)luxation in either one or both femoropatellar joints. Over a period of 20 years, 49 foals were born from different mating combinations. Some offspring were free from the defect and others showed the abnormality. Though the number of foals bred during the experiment is rather smal...
Genetic studies of neuraxonal dystrophy in the Morgan.
American journal of veterinary research    January 1, 1987   Volume 48, Issue 1 109-113 
Beech J, Haskins M.A naturally occurring disease condition, neuraxonal dystrophy, was identified in 27 male and 15 female Morgans, many of which were closely related. Five-generation pedigrees were constructed for 33 of these horses and were compared with those for 29 randomly selected age- and sex-matched Morgans. Their mean coefficient of inbreeding was not statistically different (P greater than 0.1, 1 tailed t test; P less than 0.001, median test). Breeding of 2 severely affected and 2 normal stallions to 2 severely affected, 3 mildly affected, and 6 normal mares produced 10 mildly affected, 8 suspect affect...
Phalangeal and navicular bone hypoplasia and hoof malformation in the hind limbs of a foal.
The Canadian veterinary journal = La revue veterinaire canadienne    January 1, 1986   Volume 27, Issue 1 28-34 
Smith DR, Leach DH, Bell RJ.Anatomical anomalies in the hind feet of a seven month old Appaloosa foal were identified and investigated through the use of gross anatomical dissection, radiography and angiography. Abnormalities were restricted to the distal aspect of both hind legs, the right hind leg being more severely affected. Anatomically the right foot resembled that of an equine fetus of approximately 120 days gestational age. Disruption of vascular perfusion to hoof structures was evident in both hind legs and was related to areas of abnormal bone conformation as well as to areas of abnormal ossification and calcif...
Heredity of navicular disease.
The veterinary quarterly    January 1, 1986   Volume 8, Issue 1 68-72 doi: 10.1080/01652176.1986.9694020
Bos H, van der Meij GJ, Dik KJ.Bone structure, nutrient canals, form and definition, and a total evaluation of both fore navicular bones were radiologically evaluated in 169 three- and four-year-old Dutch warmblood mares divided into eleven daughter (half sister) groups. On the basis of the 'total evaluation', differences between the three- and four-year-old horses were detectable. Using the 'total evaluation', significant differences were found between daughter groups consisting of three-year-old mares. These differences support the theory that podotrochleosis may be (partly) due to the presence of genetic factors. The pos...
Congenital nuclear cataracts in the Morgan horse.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    June 1, 1984   Volume 184, Issue 11 1363-1365 
Beech J, Aguirre G, Gross S.Nuclear cataracts were found in 2 groups of related Morgan horses. The cataracts were finely reticulated central spherical translucencies that sometimes extended to the region of the posterior "Y" suture. The cataracts were not associated with other ocular defects and did not impair vision. In 1 group of 8 horses, 5 were affected; in the other group, 6 of 8 were affected. Although a pattern of inheritance could not be determined, the familial distribution of the cataracts supported the conclusion that the defect was a heritable disorder.
Pedigree analysis of four decades of Quarter Horse breeding.
Journal of animal science    September 1, 1983   Volume 57, Issue 3 585-593 doi: 10.2527/jas1983.573585x
Tunnell JA, Sanders JO, Williams JD, Potter GD.Pedigrees of randomly selected Quarter Horses born in each of the years 1946, 1956, 1966 and 1976 and of winning halter, cutting and race horses born in the same years were evaluated and compared. Average inbreeding and inter se relationship levels and relationships of influential ancestors to the sample were calculated for each sample. The amount of Thoroughbred influence and the average generation interval were also determined for each random sample. The levels of inbreeding found in the random samples were low, ranging from 1.3% in 1956 to 2.6% in 1966; however, these levels were higher tha...
Heritability and repeatability of speed for 2- and 3-year-old standardbred racehorses.
Journal of animal science    June 1, 1983   Volume 56, Issue 6 1294-1305 doi: 10.2527/jas1983.5661294x
Tolley EA, Notter DR, Marlowe TJ.Repeatabilities (t) and heritabilities (h2) of racing time were estimated from data on 7,206 2- and 3-yr-old Standardbred pacers and trotters competing in 1-mile (1.6 km) charted races at six tracks between 1975 and 1978. A total of 38,487 records representing 2,387 sire progeny groups were divided into subsets by gait, age and track. Initially, the designation "class of race" was recognized as a subjective categorization that reflected nonrandom assignments of horses to races. After extensive investigation, we concluded that racing times should be adjusted by linear regression for the time of...
Linkage disequilibrium between the ELA and the A blood group systems in Standardbred horses.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1983   Volume 14, Issue 1 37-43 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1983.tb01058.x
Bailey E.The linkage group formed by the ELA and A blood group system in horses was studied in American Standardbred horses. The distance between the ELA locus and the A blood group locus was measured as 1.61 centimorgans, observing only the haplotypes contributed by the sires. Strong linkage disequilibrium was found in pacing Standardbred horses for ELA-W1 with Aa, ELA-W5 with Ab and ELA-W10 with Ab. Linkage disequilibrium was apparent at both the population and family level. Among trotting Standardbred horses, linkage disequilibrium was found for ELA-W1 with Aa and for ELA-W10 with Ab. It was not pos...
Congenital intestinal aganglionosis in white foals.
Veterinary pathology    January 1, 1983   Volume 20, Issue 1 65-70 doi: 10.1177/030098588302000107
Vonderfecht SL, Bowling AT, Cohen M.A congenital and probably hereditary neurological defect has been identified in the intestinal tract of six foals produced from the breeding of overo (a type of spotting pattern) horses. The foals had white hair and pink skin with the exception of occasional pigmented foci about the muzzle, ventral abdomen, and hindquarters. The foals appeared normal at birth, but within a few hours developed symptoms of colic. At necropsy, the only significant finding was a narrow, pale segment of large intestine. This abnormality either was confined to the small colon and rectum or involved the entire colon ...
Hereditary lethal arthrogryposis (“muscle contracture”) in horses.
Nordisk veterinaermedicin    December 1, 1982   Volume 34, Issue 12 425-430 
Nes N, Lømo OM, Bjerkås I.In 4 female foals of the Norwegian horse breed, "Fjord Horse", congenital arthrogryposis of the limbs are described. The disorder was mainly limited to the hind limbs and associated with polydactylia and partly with brachygnathia superior and cleft palate. The defective foals were paternal halfsisters of 4 normal foals (1 female + 3 males), sired by the stallion "Bingo" 1804, which was phenotypically quite normal. The disorder being lethal, is possibly caused by a sex-limited or a strongly sex-influenced dominant gene.
[ECG similarities in the parents and offspring of thoroughbred horses].
Veterinarni medicina    February 1, 1982   Volume 27, Issue 2 87-93 
Hanák J, Zert Z.The ECG characters were studied in two sires (Manrico and Infernal) and their 26-membered set of progeny as well as in one mare (Victoire) and her five daughters. The confer of some ECG characters from the sire's side as well as from the mare's side to the offspring was demonstrated. The consistency of some ECG characters was particularly obvious in externally dominant Manrico sire and his offspring as well as in the breeding mare and her five daughters (inclination of the electric cardiac axis, intrinsicoid deflexion lag, P wave shape, deep S in the 3rd connection).
Genetics of Standardbred stallion reproductive performance.
Journal of reproduction and fertility. Supplement    January 1, 1982   Volume 32 135-142 
Weitkamp LR, MacCluer JW, Guttormsen S, McKnight J, Wert N, Witmer J, Boyce P, Egloff J.Reproductive performance of 10 Standardbred stallions was related to the probability that the embryo resulting from a given mating would be heterozygous for transferrin or plasma esterase. Fertility, measured by foaling rate per insemination or by foaling rate per year, showed a highly significant regression on the probability of offspring heterozygosity for transferrin and, to lesser extent, for esterase. Substantial differences between stallions in the slope of the regression line and no deficiency of foals homozygous for either protein suggests that the relationship to fertility is indirect...
Hereditary multiple exostoses. Hereditary multiple exostoses in horses.
The American journal of pathology    September 1, 1981   Volume 104, Issue 3 285-288 
Shupe JL, Leone NC, Gardner EJ, Olson AE.No abstract available
Damnosa hereditas.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1981   Volume 13, Issue 2 78-79 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1981.tb04115.x
No abstract available
Coat color and gestation length in thoroughbred mares.
The Journal of heredity    January 1, 1981   Volume 72, Issue 1 65-66 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a109433
Dring LA, Hintz HF, Van Vleck LD.Average gestation periods for bay, chestnut, dark bay, gray, and black Thoroughbred mares were compared. A total of 1359 gestation periods were used. A linear model including factors for age of mare, sex of foal, month and year of breeding, and sire effects was used in the analysis. Dam and sire coat-color combinations were also investigated in a similar manner. No significant differences in gestation length could be attributed to coat color of the mare of to dam and sire coat-color combinations. Heritability of gestation length was estimated to be 0.38. The results of this study strongly sugg...
Genetics of performance in the horse.
Journal of animal science    September 1, 1980   Volume 51, Issue 3 582-594 doi: 10.2527/jas1980.513582x
Hintz RL.Criteria used to measure performance, environmental factors that influence performance and estimates of heritability are needed to estimate genetic differences. Published heritability estimates of various measures of performance in the horse are summarized. The average heritability estimates of pulling ability and cutting ability are .25 and .04, respectively. Heritability estimates are .18, .19 and .17 for log of earnings from jumping, 3-day event and dressage performance, respectively. Heritability estimates of performance rates, log of earnings, earnings, handicap weight, best handicap weig...
[Estimation of the heritability coefficient of stud fertility].
Veterinarni medicina    May 1, 1980   Volume 25, Issue 5 299-304 
Dusek J, Munk Z.The breeding documentation of the English Thoroughbred horse breeding farm at Napajedla was analyzed to study some effects acting upon the fertility of studs and mares and the length of gravidity. The heritability of fertility is the subject of this report. The normality of the distribution of fertility was tested by processing 300 data on fertility at the given significance level sup / Fn(xi) - F(xi) / less than or equal to Dn(a). The value of the supreme D(300) = 0.108 is lower than the critical level for alpha 0.05. The estimation of fertility heritability coefficient indicates that h2 = 0....
Hereditary multiple exostoses: clinicopathologic features of a comparative study in horses and man.
American journal of veterinary research    June 1, 1979   Volume 40, Issue 6 751-757 
Shupe JL, Leone NC, Olson AE, Gardner EJ.Investigation of hereditary multiple exostoses in horses under controlled research conditions for 10 years and epidemiologic studies that have spanned up to five generations of human families contain notable similarities. The present study demonstrated that a single dominant autosomal gene is responsible for hereditary multiple exostoses in horses and man. Affected individuals transmit this trait to approximately 50% of their progeny, whereas nonaffected individuals do not transmit the condition to their offspring. The tumors in affected horses are most often present at birth. They tend to be ...
Linkage of tobiano coat spotting and albumin markers in a pony family.
The Journal of heredity    July 1, 1978   Volume 69, Issue 4 214-216 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108933
Trommershausen-Smith A.Genetic segregation patterns among blood type markers and various phenotypically observed traits were studied in a small herd of ponies. The herd consisted of 10 mares without white spotting and a single stallion with the dominant pattern of tobiano spotting. Comparison of segregation patterns at loci for which the stallion was heterozygous showed tight linkage for the Alb-B and tobiano markers. In 17 cases in which the Alb contribution of the sire could be determined, all 10 foals that inherited AlbB from him were tobiano spotted, and all 7 non-spotted foals inherited his AlbA. The use of the...
Inheritance of yellow dun and blue dun in the Icelandic toelter horse.
The Journal of heredity    May 1, 1978   Volume 69, Issue 3 146-148 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108913
Adalsteinsson S.The coat colors of 161 progeny from matings between 10 yellow dun and 6 blue dun stallions and mares of 8 different colors are described. The results confirm the previous hypothesis that a dominant dilution gene, D, converts bay to yellow dun with dark mane and tail, chestnut to yellow dun and dun mane and tail, and black to blue dun (mouse, grullo). The palomino gene, c cr, on the other hand, is hypostatic to black and blue dun. In heterozygous form, c cr converts bay to buckskin, and chestnut and sorrel to palomino, and results in blue-eyed white when homozygous. No particular effect of D is...
The inheritance of heart score in racehorses.
Australian veterinary journal    July 1, 1977   Volume 53, Issue 7 306-309 doi: 10.1111/j.1751-0813.1977.tb00237.x
Steel JD, Beilharz RG, Stewart GA, Goddard M.No abstract available
Combined immunodeficiency in foals in Arabian breeding: evaluation of mode of inheritance and estimation of prevalence of affected foals and carrier mares and stallions.
Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association    January 1, 1977   Volume 170, Issue 1 31-33 
Poppie MJ, McGuire TC.Combined immunodeficiency (CID), a defect in both B- and T-lymphocytes, was found to occur in 2.3% of 257 foals of Arabian breeding. All affected foals died by 5 months of age. The belief that CID is transmitted as an autosomal recessive genetic defect was supported by results from matings of dams and sires that had previously produced affected foals. Based on a prevalence of 2.3%, the proportion of carriers of the CID trait among the adult population surveyed was estimated to be 25.7%. Recent descriptions of other immunologic defects in foals emphasized the need for careful differential diagn...
A further study of the inheritance of racing performance in thoroughbred horses.
The Journal of heredity    July 1, 1976   Volume 67, Issue 4 247-248 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108721
Field JK, Cunningham EP.In an analysis of handicap ratings of 1158 3-year-old thoroughbred racehorses, estimates were obtained for the effects of sex differences, the correlation between mates, the effectiveness of selection in males and females, and the heritability of racing performance. The results agreed closely with those of a previous study, and indicated a heritability of about 0.35 to 0.40, some assortative mating, and highly effective selection for performance.
Hereditary multiple exostosis. A comparative genetic evaluation in man and horses.
The Journal of heredity    November 1, 1975   Volume 66, Issue 6 318-326 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108640
Gardner EJ, Shupe JL, Leone NC, Olson AE.Comparative studies are being conducted on hereditary multiple exostosis in man and the horse. In both, there is an unquestionable inheritance pattern of a typical single, dominant, autosomal gene. Those who carry the gene have a one-half chance of transmitting it to each offspring, whereas, those who do not carry the gene do not transmit this abnormality to their progeny. The lesions are clinically and histologically similar; no persistent chromosomal irregularities have been associated with the abnormality in either man or the horse and no single evidence of malignancy in either man or anima...
Inheritance of the palomino color in Icelandic horses.
The Journal of heredity    January 1, 1974   Volume 65, Issue 1 15-20 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108448
Adalsteinsson S.No abstract available