P Kalds, S Zhou, Y Gao, B Cai, S Huang… - Genetics Selection …, 2022 - Springer
Background After domestication, the evolution of phenotypically-varied sheep breeds has generated rich biodiversity. This wide phenotypic variation arises as a result of hidden …
Domestication and the subsequent selection of animals for either economic or morphological features can leave a variety of imprints on the genome of a population …
Background The detection of signatures of selection has the potential to elucidate the identities of genes and mutations associated with phenotypic traits important for livestock …
Domestication and selection are the major driving forces responsible for the determinative genetic variability in livestock. These selection patterns create unique genetic signatures …
Climatic variables can trigger physiological, biochemical, haematological and hormonal alterations that influence the maintenance of homeothermy and can affect production and …
Background Artificial selection for economically important traits in cattle is expected to have left distinctive selection signatures on the genome. Access to high-density genotypes …
Following domestication, livestock breeds have experienced intense selection pressures for the development of desirable traits. This has resulted in a large diversity of breeds that …
C Wei, H Wang, G Liu, M Wu, J Cao, Z Liu, R Liu… - BMC genomics, 2015 - Springer
Abstract Background Traditionally, Chinese indigenous sheep were classified geographically and morphologically into three groups: Mongolian, Kazakh and Tibetan …
Abstract Background In the Neolithic, domestic sheep migrated into Europe and subsequently spread in westerly and northwesterly directions. Reconstruction of these …