The need to manage inbreeding in closed populations of animals such as domestic pets, captive populations of wildlife, or farmed livestock has been further emerging in international policy through individual national efforts, as well as guidance from regulatory bodies such as the United Nations Farm Animal Organization. As gene sequencing technologies become more widespread and levels of inbreeding can now be assessed using runs of homozygosity (ROH) determined using single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), it has been suggested that pedigrees alone are no longer adequate to formulate breed management programs (Dell et al., 2020a).Conversely, it has been suggested that where a pedigree is deep, it may well remain the preferred tool to assist in formulating breed