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Topic:Pedigree

Pedigree analysis in horses involves the study of lineage and ancestry to understand genetic relationships and inheritance patterns. It is a tool used to track traits, performance potential, and hereditary diseases within horse populations. Pedigree records often include detailed information on the ancestors of a horse, going back several generations, and can help in making informed breeding decisions. This page assembles peer-reviewed research studies and scholarly articles that explore the methodologies, applications, and implications of pedigree analysis in equine breeding and genetics.
Electrophoretic markers of Andalusian horses: comparison of Spanish and Lusitanian lineages.
Comparative biochemistry and physiology. B, Comparative biochemistry    January 1, 1986   Volume 83, Issue 3 575-588 doi: 10.1016/0305-0491(86)90299-3
Kaminski M, de Andres Cara DF.Genetic variants at eight blood loci were analysed, disclosing in Andalusian breed six rare markers: variants J of transferrin, H of esterase, D and S of Xk, M and W of prealbumin. Two of these, TfJ and PrM appear as characteristic markers of Andalusian breed. Allelic frequencies showed minor differences between Spanish (300 horses) and Lusitanian (100 horses) populations. Comparison was established with historically related breeds, Thoroughbreds or Connemara, and with Arab horses because of a presumed relationship. No visible similarities in genetic profiles were found with two former breeds,...
XY sex-reversal syndrome in the domestic horse.
Cytogenetics and cell genetics    January 1, 1986   Volume 42, Issue 1-2 8-18 doi: 10.1159/000132243
Kent MG, Shoffner RN, Buoen L, Weber AF.The XY sex-reversal syndrome occurs when a phenotypic mare is born that has the karyotype of a stallion. The syndrome is manifested by both genotypic and phenotypic heterogeneity. The sex-reversed genetic condition occurs frequently within certain pedigrees where XY females have been found and can be readily detected by chromosome karyotyping. The phenotypic spectrum ranges from the feminine mare with a reproductive tract that is within normal limits to the greatly masculinized mare. Pedigree analysis suggests that there are two modes of inheritance: (1) an X-linked recessive or autosomal sex-...
Usefulness of lymphocyte typing to exclude incorrectly assigned paternity in horses.
American journal of veterinary research    October 1, 1984   Volume 45, Issue 10 1976-1978 
Bailey E.Lymphocyte typing can be used to detect incorrectly identified parentage of horses. Efficacies of lymphocyte typing to solve paternity questions were calculated using gene frequency estimates of equine lymphocyte antigen (ELA) markers for Thoroughbreds and Standardbreds. Probabilities that ELA typing will detect an incorrectly assigned sire were 68.7% in Thoroughbreds, 67.9% in pacing Standardbreds, and 62.0% in trotting Standardbreds. These calculations demonstrate that ELA typing is among the most efficacious genetic systems for solving paternity questions in horses. Likewise, it could also ...
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...
[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...
Irregular transmissions in the acidic prealbumin (Pr) system of the horse.
Animal blood groups and biochemical genetics    January 1, 1980   Volume 11, Issue 2 109-112 doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2052.1980.tb01500.x
Braend M.During the routine parentage control of Norwegian Trotter horses with 10 000 parent offspring combinations two irregular transmissions of Pr alleles were found. The allele products were provisionally named D1 and D2. They appeared in two stallions which were typed as D1I and D2N respectively. The first stallion transmitted PrD1 to seven out of 10 offspring and the second stallion PrD2 to two of four offspring. Photographs of seven new Pr phenotypes are presented.
Horse markings: their importance to the integrity of racing and breeding.
The Veterinary record    September 8, 1979   Volume 105, Issue 10 213-215 doi: 10.1136/vr.105.10.213
Greeves PR, Witherington DH.The difficulties that arise in filling out marking certificates for thoroughbreds are described. The description given on the certificate has to be both written and graphic. A general guide to whorl location is given.
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...
Congenital occipitoatlantoaxial malformations in the horse.
Equine veterinary journal    April 1, 1978   Volume 10, Issue 2 103-113 doi: 10.1111/j.2042-3306.1978.tb02232.x
Mayhew IG, Watson AG, Heissan JA.From a clinical, radiological and morphological study of 9 horses with congenital malformations of the occiput, atlas and axis, and from a study of 2 reported cases, 3 diseases were defined: A. Familial occipitalisation of the atlas with atlantalisation of the axis in Arabian horses (7 cases in this report and the case reported by Leipold, et al., 1974). These horses had congenital atlantooccipital fusion, hypoplasia of the atlas and dens, malformation of the axis and modification of the atlantoaxial joint. B. Congenital asymmetrical occipitoatlantoaxial malformation (2 cases in this report). ...
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
Use of blood typing to confirm principles of coat-color genetics in horses.
The Journal of heredity    January 1, 1976   Volume 67, Issue 1 6-10 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108667
Trommershausen-Smith A, Suzuki Y, Stormont C.The chestnut rule in equine coat-color genetics asserts that the inter se mating of chestnut horses never produces bay, black, brown or gray offspring. The gray rule asserts that a gray offspring must have at least one gray parent. Nine alleged exceptions to the chestnut rule, all involving bay offspring, and eight alleged exceptions to the gray rule, including four offspring that were also exceptions to the chestnut rule, were examined for parent-offspring genetic incompatibilities in as many as 17 genetic systems of blood-group markers. In all except one of the 17 cases it was possible to sh...
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
[Population genetics and animal breeding].
Monatshefte fur Veterinarmedizin    November 15, 1969   Volume 24, Issue 22 865-870 
Bartsch KH.No abstract available
[Biochemical polymorphism and the detection of paternity in horses].
Schweizer Archiv fur Tierheilkunde    July 1, 1967   Volume 109, Issue 7 378-385 
Baer A.No abstract available
[Statistical introduction to the genetics of limited white markings in domestic horses].
Annales de genetique    June 1, 1966   Volume 9, Issue 2 66-72 
Dreux P.No abstract available
[Horse breeding in Austria].
Wiener tierarztliche Monatsschrift    April 1, 1966   Volume 53, Issue 4 235-245 
Stelzer F.No abstract available
[Chromosome study in an equine family: mare, horse and mule]. Kofman-Alfaro S, Márquez Monter H, Mercado Rosas H, Funes Cravioto F.No abstract available
New evidence on the genetics of the Palomino horse.
The Journal of heredity    March 1, 1951   Volume 42, Issue 2 60-64 
CASTLE WE, KING FL.No abstract available
A study of the first fifty years of Tennessee walking horse breeding.
The Journal of heredity    December 1, 1946   Volume 37, Issue 12 369-373 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a105563
FLETCHER JL.No abstract available
The development of a superior family in the modern quarter horse.
The Journal of heredity    August 1, 1946   Volume 37, Issue 8 227-238 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a105622
RHOAD AO, KLEBERG RJ.No abstract available
Genetics of the Palomino horse; confirmation of the Salisbury-Britton hypothesis.
The Journal of heredity    February 1, 1946   Volume 37 35-38 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a105569
CASTLE WE.No abstract available
A genetic analysis of the American quarter horse.
The Journal of heredity    November 1, 1945   Volume 36 346-352 doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a105438
FLETCHER JL.No abstract available
Inbreeding in cattle and horses: With reference to certain effects therefrom in shorthorn cattle and clydesdale horses.
The Eugenics review    October 1, 1926   Volume 18, Issue 3 189-204 
Smith AD.No abstract available
The Possible Ancestors of the Horses Living Under Domestication.
Science (New York, N.Y.)    August 13, 1909   Volume 30, Issue 763 219-223 doi: 10.1126/science.30.763.219
Ewart JC.No abstract available
Genotyping in the Brazilian Criollo Horse Stud Book: resources and perspectives.
   March 17, 2026  
The goal of this research was to evaluate the ability of the genotyping information available in the Brazilian Criollo Horse Stud Book to describe the genetic variability of the breed and the exclusion probability determined in comparative tests. Altogether, two softwares were used in the analyses of the available genotypes: Cervus 3.0.3 and Genepop 4.0. Eight microsatellite markers totaled 109 alleles, with an average of 13.6 +/- 0.6 alleles per locus. Large differences between expected and observed heterozygosity were ubiquitous (0.821 +/- 0.07 and 0.470 +/- 0.17, respectively). Although the...
Genetic diversity and origin of the feral horses in Theodore Roosevelt National Park.
   March 17, 2026  
Feral horses in Theodore Roosevelt National Park (TRNP) represent an iconic era of the North Dakota Badlands. Their uncertain history raises management questions regarding origins, genetic diversity, and long-term genetic viability. Hair samples with follicles were collected from 196 horses in the Park and used to sequence the control region of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and to profile 12 autosomal short tandem repeat (STR) markers. Three mtDNA haplotypes found in the TRNP horses belonged to haplogroups L and B. The control region variation was low with haplotype diversity of 0.5271, nucleotide...
The American Quarter Horse: population structure and relationship to the thoroughbred.
   March 17, 2026  
A breed known for its versatility, the American Quarter Horse (QH), is increasingly bred for performance in specific disciplines. The impact of selective breeding on the diversity and structure of the QH breed was evaluated using pedigree analysis and genome-wide SNP data from horses representing 6 performance groups (halter, western pleasure, reining, working cow, cutting, and racing). Genotype data (36 037 single nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs]) from 36 Thoroughbreds were also evaluated with those from the 132 performing QHs to evaluate the Thoroughbred's influence on QH diversity. Results s...
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