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Stayability: Difference between revisions

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[[Category: Reproduction Traits]]
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Stayability is generally defined as the probability of surviving to a specific age, given the opportunity to reach that age.  Adapted to beef cows, the general definition of stayability is the probability of a cow surviving to her cost-breakeven age, given the opportunity to reach that age.  Cows usually need five consecutive calves by six years of age to generate enough income to pay their development and maintenance costs, so the age of six years was established as the target age for stayability.  Without records of which females were retained for breeding and every calf they raised, cows with at least one calf before age six years were considered to have opportunity, and successful cows had a calf at age six years or older.  Annual production records required by [[ Whole Herd Reporting | whole-herd reporting ]] systems enable more rigorous definitions of stayability.  Calving first as a two-year-old can indicate opportunity, and a calf every year through age six years may be required for success.


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A version of stayability, called sustained cow fertility, is provided by the American Hereford AssociationIt is calculated as a cow's ability to stay in the herd producing calves through 12 years.
    Stayability is generally defined as the probability of surviving to a specific age, given the opportunity to reach that ageAdapted to beef cows, the general definition of stayability is the probability of a cow surviving to her breakeven age, given the opportunity to reach that age.  Cows usually need five consecutive calves by six years of age to generate enough income to pay their development and maintenance costs, so the age of six is was established as the target age for satiability.  Without records of which females were retained for breeding and every calf they raised, cows with at least one calf before age six were considered to have opportunity, and successful cows had a calf at age 6 or older.  Annual production records required by whole-herd reporting systems enable more rigorous definitions of stayability.  Calving first as a two-year-old can indicate opportunity, and a calf every year through age six may be required for success.  
                                                                             
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===Phenotype===
===Phenotype===
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Observations of stayability are binary, either success (1) or failure (0).  An observation should be assigned to all females who are old enough and are considered to have had an opportunity to succeed.  Missing values should be assigned to females who are too young or otherwise did not have an opportunity to succeed.  That may include cows culled for reasons other than reproductive failure, breeding females sold before the target age, and females used as donors or recipients in embryo transfer and in vitro fertilization programs.


===Adjusted Value===
===Adjusted Value===
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There is no adjustment to the binary (0,1) stayability observations.
===Contempory Group===
===Contempory Group===
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Contemporary groups for stayability should include all females entering the breeding herd with the same opportunity to stay.  Basic information used to form stayability contemporary groups is heifers' weaning contemporary group, and contemporary group of their first calves, when they calved as two-year-olds.


===Genetic Evaluation===
===Genetic Evaluation===
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In its initial release in 1995, stayability was analyzed using a maximum a posteriori threshold model (MAP).<ref>W. M. Snelling, B. L. Golden, R. M. Bourdon, Within-herd genetic analyses of stayability of beef females, Journal of Animal Science, Volume 73, Issue 4, April 1995, Pages 993–1001, https://doi.org/10.2527/1995.734993x</ref> More recently, a random regression model (RR) has been implemented.<ref>J. Jamrozik, S. McGrath, R. A. Kemp, S. P. Miller, Estimates of genetic parameters for stayability to consecutive calvings of Canadian Simmentals by random regression models, Journal of Animal Science, Volume 91, Issue 8, August 2013, Pages 3634–3643, https://doi.org/10.2527/jas.2012-6126</ref>  The random regression approach accommodates observations from all ages of cows, not just six-year-old and older cows, and uses observations from contemporary groups with no variation.  Contemporary groups with no variation were removed from the initial MAP evaluations to avoid computational problems.


===Usage===
===Usage===
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     Discuss in what circumstances the trait is an ERT or an indicator trait and how the trait should be used and not used.
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Stayability EPD predict differences in the percentage of bulls' daughters that will remain in production through age six.  Stayability is an [[Economically Relevant Traits | ERT]] in herds that generate their own replacement females.  Herds purchasing replacement females may consider stayability EPD of the sires of those females.  Stayability is irrelevant to terminal sires, whose daughters will not be bred.
==References==

Latest revision as of 03:32, 8 December 2021

Stayability is generally defined as the probability of surviving to a specific age, given the opportunity to reach that age. Adapted to beef cows, the general definition of stayability is the probability of a cow surviving to her cost-breakeven age, given the opportunity to reach that age. Cows usually need five consecutive calves by six years of age to generate enough income to pay their development and maintenance costs, so the age of six years was established as the target age for stayability. Without records of which females were retained for breeding and every calf they raised, cows with at least one calf before age six years were considered to have opportunity, and successful cows had a calf at age six years or older. Annual production records required by whole-herd reporting systems enable more rigorous definitions of stayability. Calving first as a two-year-old can indicate opportunity, and a calf every year through age six years may be required for success.

A version of stayability, called sustained cow fertility, is provided by the American Hereford Association. It is calculated as a cow's ability to stay in the herd producing calves through 12 years.


Phenotype

Observations of stayability are binary, either success (1) or failure (0). An observation should be assigned to all females who are old enough and are considered to have had an opportunity to succeed. Missing values should be assigned to females who are too young or otherwise did not have an opportunity to succeed. That may include cows culled for reasons other than reproductive failure, breeding females sold before the target age, and females used as donors or recipients in embryo transfer and in vitro fertilization programs.

Adjusted Value

There is no adjustment to the binary (0,1) stayability observations.

Contempory Group

Contemporary groups for stayability should include all females entering the breeding herd with the same opportunity to stay. Basic information used to form stayability contemporary groups is heifers' weaning contemporary group, and contemporary group of their first calves, when they calved as two-year-olds.

Genetic Evaluation

In its initial release in 1995, stayability was analyzed using a maximum a posteriori threshold model (MAP).[1] More recently, a random regression model (RR) has been implemented.[2] The random regression approach accommodates observations from all ages of cows, not just six-year-old and older cows, and uses observations from contemporary groups with no variation. Contemporary groups with no variation were removed from the initial MAP evaluations to avoid computational problems.

Usage

Stayability EPD predict differences in the percentage of bulls' daughters that will remain in production through age six. Stayability is an ERT in herds that generate their own replacement females. Herds purchasing replacement females may consider stayability EPD of the sires of those females. Stayability is irrelevant to terminal sires, whose daughters will not be bred.

References

  1. W. M. Snelling, B. L. Golden, R. M. Bourdon, Within-herd genetic analyses of stayability of beef females, Journal of Animal Science, Volume 73, Issue 4, April 1995, Pages 993–1001, https://doi.org/10.2527/1995.734993x
  2. J. Jamrozik, S. McGrath, R. A. Kemp, S. P. Miller, Estimates of genetic parameters for stayability to consecutive calvings of Canadian Simmentals by random regression models, Journal of Animal Science, Volume 91, Issue 8, August 2013, Pages 3634–3643, https://doi.org/10.2527/jas.2012-6126