Data

Genetic diversity, population structure and origin of the native goats in Central Laos - Dataset

University of New England, Australia
Le, Van ; de, las ; Alexandri, Panoraia ; Olmo, Luisa ; Walkden-Brown, Stephen ; Van, Der
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ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.25952/gkzs-p117&rft.title=Genetic diversity, population structure and origin of the native goats in Central Laos - Dataset&rft.identifier=10.25952/gkzs-p117&rft.publisher=University of New England, Australia&rft.description=Maintaining genetic diversity and variation in livestock populations is critical for natural and artificial selection promoting genetic improvement while avoiding problems due to inbreeding. In Laos, there are concerns that there has been a decline in genetic diversity and a rise in inbreeding among native goats in their village-based smallholder system. In this study, we investigated the genetic diversity of Lao native goats in Phin, Songkhone and Sepon districts in Central Laos for the first time using Illumina's Goat SNP50 BeadChip. We also explored the genetic relationships between Lao goats with 163 global goat populations from 36 countries. Our results revealled a close genetic relationship between Lao native goats and Chinese, Mongolian and Pakistani goats, sharing ancestries with Guangfen, Jining Grey and Luoping Yellow breeds (China) and Teddi goats (Pakistan). The observed (Ho) and expected (He) heterozygosity were 0.292 and 0.303 (Laos), 0.288 and 0.288 (Sepon), 0.299 and 0.308 (Phin) and 0.289 and 0.305 (Songkhone), respectively. There was low to moderate genetic differentiation (FST: 0.011–0.043) and negligible inbreeding coefficients (FIS: −0.001 to 0.052) between goat districts. The runs of homozygosity (ROH) had an average length of 5.92–6.85 Mb, with short ROH segments (1–5 Mb length) being the most prevalent (66.34%). Longer ROH segments (20–40 and >40 Mb length categories) were less common, comprising only 4.81% and 1.01%, respectively. Lao goats exhibit moderate genetic diversity, low-inbreeding levels and adequate effective population size. Some genetic distinctions between Lao goats may be explained by geographic and cultural features.&rft.creator=Le, Van &rft.creator=de, las &rft.creator=Alexandri, Panoraia &rft.creator=Olmo, Luisa &rft.creator=Walkden-Brown, Stephen &rft.creator=Van, Der &rft.date=2024&rft.coverage=Laos&rft.coverage=Savannakhet, Laos&rft_rights=Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International&rft_rights=http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/&rft_rights=Rights holder: Sang Le&rft_rights=Rights holder: Sang Le&rft_rights=Rights holder: Sang Le&rft_rights=Rights holder: Sang Le&rft_rights=The data are owned by Project LS/2017/034 and access to the data can be negotiated by request.&rft_subject=SNP&rft_subject=genetic diversity&rft_subject=population structure&rft_subject=Lao native goats&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/

Rights holder: Sang Le

Rights holder: Sang Le

Rights holder: Sang Le

Rights holder: Sang Le

The data are owned by Project LS/2017/034 and access to the data can be negotiated by request.

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Maintaining genetic diversity and variation in livestock populations is critical for natural and artificial selection promoting genetic improvement while avoiding problems due to inbreeding. In Laos, there are concerns that there has been a decline in genetic diversity and a rise in inbreeding among native goats in their village-based smallholder system. In this study, we investigated the genetic diversity of Lao native goats in Phin, Songkhone and Sepon districts in Central Laos for the first time using Illumina's Goat SNP50 BeadChip. We also explored the genetic relationships between Lao goats with 163 global goat populations from 36 countries. Our results revealled a close genetic relationship between Lao native goats and Chinese, Mongolian and Pakistani goats, sharing ancestries with Guangfen, Jining Grey and Luoping Yellow breeds (China) and Teddi goats (Pakistan). The observed (Ho) and expected (He) heterozygosity were 0.292 and 0.303 (Laos), 0.288 and 0.288 (Sepon), 0.299 and 0.308 (Phin) and 0.289 and 0.305 (Songkhone), respectively. There was low to moderate genetic differentiation (FST: 0.011–0.043) and negligible inbreeding coefficients (FIS: −0.001 to 0.052) between goat districts. The runs of homozygosity (ROH) had an average length of 5.92–6.85 Mb, with short ROH segments (1–5 Mb length) being the most prevalent (66.34%). Longer ROH segments (20–40 and >40 Mb length categories) were less common, comprising only 4.81% and 1.01%, respectively. Lao goats exhibit moderate genetic diversity, low-inbreeding levels and adequate effective population size. Some genetic distinctions between Lao goats may be explained by geographic and cultural features.

Notes

Funding SourceThis study was supported by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research under project LS/2017/034.

Issued: 2024-03-22

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Spatial Coverage And Location

text: Savannakhet, Laos

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