-A selection experiment was conducted over six generations in a purebred French Large White population presumably free of the HAL" and RN-alleles. Two lines were taken from the same base population and were contemporarily bred: one control line (C) and one line (S) (-0, 42 ! 0, 12
-A selection experiment was conducted over six generations in a purebred French Large White population presumably free of the HAL" and RN-alleles. Two lines were taken from the same base population and were contemporarily bred: one control line (C) and one line (S) (-0, 42 ! 0, 12
A six-generation selection experiment comprising a selected (S) and a control line (C), and aiming at decreasing muscle glycolytic potential has been conducted in purebred Large White pigs presumably free of the Hal' and RNalleles. Both lines consisted of six to eight sires and around 40 dams per generation. Each dam produced two litters with replacement boars and gilts kept from the firstparity litters. The selection criterion in the S line was the in vivo glycolytic potential (IVGP) of the longissimus muscle, measured on a shot biopsy sample removed at about 75 kg live weight. Correlated responses to selection for low IVGP as well as heritabilities and genetic correlations with IVGP were estimated for average daily gain (6 761 offspring from parities 1 and 2), ultrasonic backfat thickness (3 078 boars and gilts from parity 1), carcass composition traits (1 185 castrated males and gilts from parity 2), age at first oestrus (1084 gilts) and litter size and weight at birth, at 21 days of age and at weaning (917 litters). Heritability estimates of these traits were within the usual range of literature values. The estimates of genetic correlation (r A ) with IVGP were 0.15 ! 0.07 for average daily gain, —0.32 ±0.06 for ultrasonic backfat thickness, -0.20 ! 0.10 for carcass backfat thickness, —0.24 ±0.09 for weight * Correspondence and reprints: Station d'amelioration génétique des animaux, BP 27,
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.