Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia

Background: In sub-Saharan Africa, 80% of poultry production is on smallholder village farms, where chickens are typically reared outdoors in free-ranging conditions. There is limited knowledge on chickens’ phenotypic characteristics and genetics under these conditions. Objective: The present is a...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Morris, K.M., Sutton, K., Girma, Mekonnen, Sánchez-Molano, E., Solomon, B., Esatu, Wondmeneh, Dessie, Tadelle, Vervelde, L., Psifidi, A., Hanotte, Olivier H., Banos, G.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Frontiers Media 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/148834
_version_ 1855531982871592960
author Morris, K.M.
Sutton, K.
Girma, Mekonnen
Sánchez-Molano, E.
Solomon, B.
Esatu, Wondmeneh
Dessie, Tadelle
Vervelde, L.
Psifidi, A.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Banos, G.
author_browse Banos, G.
Dessie, Tadelle
Esatu, Wondmeneh
Girma, Mekonnen
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Morris, K.M.
Psifidi, A.
Solomon, B.
Sutton, K.
Sánchez-Molano, E.
Vervelde, L.
author_facet Morris, K.M.
Sutton, K.
Girma, Mekonnen
Sánchez-Molano, E.
Solomon, B.
Esatu, Wondmeneh
Dessie, Tadelle
Vervelde, L.
Psifidi, A.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Banos, G.
author_sort Morris, K.M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Background: In sub-Saharan Africa, 80% of poultry production is on smallholder village farms, where chickens are typically reared outdoors in free-ranging conditions. There is limited knowledge on chickens’ phenotypic characteristics and genetics under these conditions. Objective: The present is a large-scale study set out to phenotypically characterise the performance of tropically adapted commercial chickens in typical smallholder farm conditions, and to examine the genetic profile of chicken phenotypes associated with growth, meat production, immunity, and survival. Methods: A total of 2,573 T451A dual-purpose Sasso chickens kept outdoors in emulated free-ranging conditions at the poultry facility of the International Livestock Research Institute in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, were included in the study. The chickens were raised in five equally sized batches and were individually monitored and phenotyped from the age of 56 days for 8 weeks. Individual chicken data collected included weekly body weight, growth rate, body and breast meat weight at slaughter, Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV) titres and intestinal Immunoglobulin A (IgA) levels recorded at the beginning and the end of the period of study, and survival rate during the same period. Genotyping by sequencing was performed on all chickens using a low-coverage and imputation approach. Chicken phenotypes and genotypes were combined in genomic association analyses. Results: We discovered that the chickens were phenotypically diverse, with extensive variance levels observed in all traits. Batch number and sex of the chicken significantly affected the studied phenotypes. Following quality assurance, genotypes consisted of 2.9 million Single Nucleotide Polymorphism markers that were used in the genomic analyses. Results revealed a largely polygenic mode of genetic control of all phenotypic traits. Nevertheless, 15 distinct markers were identified that were significantly associated with growth, carcass traits, NDV titres, IgA levels, and chicken survival. These markers were located in regions harbouring relevant annotated genes. Conclusion: Results suggest that performance of chickens raised under smallholder farm conditions is amenable to genetic improvement and may inform selective breeding programmes for enhanced chicken productivity in sub-Saharan Africa.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace148834
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Frontiers Media
publisherStr Frontiers Media
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1488342025-12-08T10:29:22Z Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia Morris, K.M. Sutton, K. Girma, Mekonnen Sánchez-Molano, E. Solomon, B. Esatu, Wondmeneh Dessie, Tadelle Vervelde, L. Psifidi, A. Hanotte, Olivier H. Banos, G. animal breeding chickens genetics smallholders indigenous breeds Background: In sub-Saharan Africa, 80% of poultry production is on smallholder village farms, where chickens are typically reared outdoors in free-ranging conditions. There is limited knowledge on chickens’ phenotypic characteristics and genetics under these conditions. Objective: The present is a large-scale study set out to phenotypically characterise the performance of tropically adapted commercial chickens in typical smallholder farm conditions, and to examine the genetic profile of chicken phenotypes associated with growth, meat production, immunity, and survival. Methods: A total of 2,573 T451A dual-purpose Sasso chickens kept outdoors in emulated free-ranging conditions at the poultry facility of the International Livestock Research Institute in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, were included in the study. The chickens were raised in five equally sized batches and were individually monitored and phenotyped from the age of 56 days for 8 weeks. Individual chicken data collected included weekly body weight, growth rate, body and breast meat weight at slaughter, Newcastle Disease Virus (NDV) titres and intestinal Immunoglobulin A (IgA) levels recorded at the beginning and the end of the period of study, and survival rate during the same period. Genotyping by sequencing was performed on all chickens using a low-coverage and imputation approach. Chicken phenotypes and genotypes were combined in genomic association analyses. Results: We discovered that the chickens were phenotypically diverse, with extensive variance levels observed in all traits. Batch number and sex of the chicken significantly affected the studied phenotypes. Following quality assurance, genotypes consisted of 2.9 million Single Nucleotide Polymorphism markers that were used in the genomic analyses. Results revealed a largely polygenic mode of genetic control of all phenotypic traits. Nevertheless, 15 distinct markers were identified that were significantly associated with growth, carcass traits, NDV titres, IgA levels, and chicken survival. These markers were located in regions harbouring relevant annotated genes. Conclusion: Results suggest that performance of chickens raised under smallholder farm conditions is amenable to genetic improvement and may inform selective breeding programmes for enhanced chicken productivity in sub-Saharan Africa. 2024 2024-07-02T04:42:24Z 2024-07-02T04:42:24Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/148834 en Open Access Frontiers Media Morris, K.M., Sutton, K., Girma, M., Sánchez-Molano, E., Solomon, B., Esatu, W., Dessie, T., Vervelde, L., Psifidi, A., Hanotte, O. and Banos, G. 2024. Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia. Frontiers in Genetics 15:1383609.
spellingShingle animal breeding
chickens
genetics
smallholders
indigenous breeds
Morris, K.M.
Sutton, K.
Girma, Mekonnen
Sánchez-Molano, E.
Solomon, B.
Esatu, Wondmeneh
Dessie, Tadelle
Vervelde, L.
Psifidi, A.
Hanotte, Olivier H.
Banos, G.
Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia
title Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia
title_full Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia
title_short Phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in Ethiopia
title_sort phenotypic and genomic characterisation of performance of tropically adapted chickens raised in smallholder farm conditions in ethiopia
topic animal breeding
chickens
genetics
smallholders
indigenous breeds
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/148834
work_keys_str_mv AT morriskm phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT suttonk phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT girmamekonnen phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT sanchezmolanoe phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT solomonb phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT esatuwondmeneh phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT dessietadelle phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT verveldel phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT psifidia phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT hanotteolivierh phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia
AT banosg phenotypicandgenomiccharacterisationofperformanceoftropicallyadaptedchickensraisedinsmallholderfarmconditionsinethiopia