2014
DOI: 10.4238/2014.april.14.4
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A multi-farm assessment of Greek black pig genetic diversity using microsatellite molecular markers

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Cited by 14 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…This paper aimed to explore the population structure and genetic diversity of various PhNP populations in Luzon and Visayas and to identify conservation priorities. Our study showed that the PhNP exhibited high allelic richness and a population structure ( In PhNP, we identified higher allelic diversity and heterozygosity (Table 2) than the values reported in indigenous pigs of Bulgaria, Croatia, and Greece, but lower values than those reported in South Africa and the Iberian pig (Fabuel et al, 2004;Gvozdanović et al, 2019;Ishikawa et al, 2021;Michailidou et al, 2014;Swart et al, 2010). Our results show the importance of PhNP as a repository of alleles, and provide clues about how its fitness has been improved despite production constraints.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 55%
“…This paper aimed to explore the population structure and genetic diversity of various PhNP populations in Luzon and Visayas and to identify conservation priorities. Our study showed that the PhNP exhibited high allelic richness and a population structure ( In PhNP, we identified higher allelic diversity and heterozygosity (Table 2) than the values reported in indigenous pigs of Bulgaria, Croatia, and Greece, but lower values than those reported in South Africa and the Iberian pig (Fabuel et al, 2004;Gvozdanović et al, 2019;Ishikawa et al, 2021;Michailidou et al, 2014;Swart et al, 2010). Our results show the importance of PhNP as a repository of alleles, and provide clues about how its fitness has been improved despite production constraints.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 55%
“…The inbreeding coefficient ( F IS ) was negative for all farm populations, with most of the values significant. Negative F IS values have been similarly observed in other semi‐wild swine (native breeds) such as the Greek black pig (Michailidou et al, 2014), Ryukyu pig (Takada et al, 2018), and Nero Siciliano pig (Guastella et al, 2010). The negative values suggest that the EBS farms are undertaking mating with other strains and/or non‐random mating to prevent inbreeding.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 72%
“…distribution than Lanyu pigs (Chang et al 2009). Henan Western Black pigs had a higher heterozygosity (0.6802) than several breeds including European pigs breeds (0.570) (Zhang and Graham, 2011), the Greek black pigs breeds (0.624) (Michailidou et al 2014), the Criollo pigs breeds (0.622) (Revidatti et al 2014), however, Henan Western Black Pigs were lower than Jeju Black Pig (0.706) (Oh et al 2014). Thus, the Black Pig populations of Henan Western Black Pigs appear to have higher levels of genetic polymorphism than the experiment of Sahoo (2015b).The Shannon index reflects the uniformity of genetic variation.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 93%