Genetic Diversity of Three Indigenous Cattle Breeds Reared in Benin
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Abstract
Livestock production is an important component of the Benin
economy contributing an upward of 25% of the agricultural Gross
Domestic Products (GDP). Indigenoues cattle sector contributes more to the
GDP compared to other livestock species. Despite the economic role played
by the sector, there has been little or no efforts to genetically improve the
indigenous cattle in the country. Recently, the government and other
development partners have embarked on projects to improve the sector
performance. The first step would be to morphologically and genetically
characterize the cattle populations so as to match them with the available
resources for optimal conservation and utilization. There exist no genetic
diversity information for the different cattle types in Benin. The objective
of this study was thus to determine the genetic diversity of the three most
abundant indigenous cattle types. A total of 86 cattle from all three breeds
were genotyped at the 14 loci. High levels of allelic and gene diversity were
observed with an overall mean of 8.67 and 0.76 respectively. The mean
inbreeding estimate within breeds was found to be negative at -0.124, -
0.111 and -0.146 in Azawak, Borgou and Somba cattle breeds respectively.
The global F statistics and AMOVA resulted in low genetic differentiation
among the breeds with 1.14% of total variation being attributed to betweenbreed
differences. Neighbor-joining tree revealed Azawak and Borgou
clustered together while Somba breed being relatively distinct from the
aforementioned. High levels of admixture were evident from the
distribution of pairwise inter-individual allele sharing distances. Besides,
the STRUCTURE analysis confirmed the tight genetic linkage between the
breeds. High genetic diversity and poor genetic structure among the cattle
breeds investigated could be due to historic zebu–taurine admixture and
unstructured breeding practices. This results will aid in design of
sustainable indigenous cattle genetic improvement programmes.
