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Monaco Pines Alpaca Ranch,
LLC
PACO VICUNA: A crossbred or hybrid vicuna and
alpaca.
PACCO: Quechua word for an Indian priest.
PARTIAL DOMINANCE: A form of dominance in
which the expression of the heterozygote is intermediate to the
expressions of the homozygous genotypes and more closely
resembles the expression of the homozygous dominant genotype.
PATERNAL BREED: A breed that excels in
paternal traits.
PATERNAL TRAIT: A trait especially important
in market offspring. Examples include rate and efficiency of
gain, meat quality, and carcass yield.
PATH METHOD: A method for calculating
inbreeding and relationship co-efficients that simulates the
paths taken by identical genes as they flow from ancestors to
descendants.
PEDIGREE: A recorded list or genealogy of an
alpaca's ancestors. A registered or recorded known line of
descent.
PEDIGREE DATA: Information on the genotype or
performance of ancestors and/or collateral relatives of an
individual.
PEDIGREE RELATIONSHIP: Relationships between
animals due to kinship, such as full-sibs, half-sibs, and
parent-offspring relationships.
PHAEOMELANIN: See melanin.
PHENOTYPE: An observed category or measured
level of performance for a trait in an individual.
PHENOTYPIC CORRELATION: The measure of the
strength (consistency, reliability) of the relationship between
performance in one trait and performance in another trait.
PHENOTYPIC SELECTION: Selection based solely
on an individual's phenotype.
PHENOTYPIC SELECTION DIFFERENTIAL: The
difference between the mean performance of those individuals
selected to be parents and the average performance of all
potential parents, expressed in units of the trait.
PHENOTYPIC SELECTION INDEX: A form of economic
selection index used with phenotypic selection. In the classic
form of phenotypic index, the traits in the index are identical
to the traits in the breeding objective.
PIEBALD: Pinto; in the New Zealand color
study, an alpaca with white and black patches.
PINTO: A two-colored animal characterized by
large patches of color.
PLANTEL: The best of the plantation. Often
used to refer to the finest of the herd or the best breeding
stock.
POLLED: Hornless.
POLYDACTYLISM: Having many toes, or more than
the ordinary complement of toes.
POLYGENES: Multiple genes that affect the same
trait.
POLYGENIC TRAIT: A trait affected by many
genes, no single gene has an over-riding influence.
POPULATION: A group of intermating
individuals. The term can refer to a breed, an entire species, a
single herd or flock, or even a small group of animals within a
herd.
POPULATION GENETICS: The study of factors
affecting gene and genotypic frequencies in a population.
POPULATION MEAN: The average phenotypic value
of all individuals in population.
POPULATION MEASURE: Any measure applied to a
population as opposed to an individual.
POSITIVE ASSORTATIVE MATING: The mating of
similar individuals.
PREPOTENCY: The ability of an individual to
produce progeny whose performance is especially like its own
and/or is especially uniform.
PRODUCING ABILITY: The performance potential
of an individual for a repeated trait.
PROGENY DATA: Information on the genotype or
performance of descendants of an individual.
PROGENY DIFFERENCE: Also transmitting ability.
Half an individual's breeding value. The expected difference
between the mean performance of the individual's progeny and the
mean performance of all progeny (assuming randomly chosen
mates).
PROGENY TEST: A test used to help predict an
individual's breeding values involving multiple matings of that
individual and evaluation of its offspring. PUNA: The high
barren tundra zone of the Andes mountains.
PUNNETT SQUARE: A two-dimensional grid used to
determine the possible zygotes obtainable from a mating.
PUREBLOOD: An animal of unmixed ancestry; bred
from members of a recognized breed or strain without a mixture
of other blood over many generations.
PUREBRED: Wholly of one breed or line (as
opposed to crossbred).
PUREBREEDING: Also straightbreeding. The
mating of purebreds of the same breed.
QIEILU: Quechua word for the color yellow.
QUALITATIVE TRAIT: A trait in which phenotypes
are expressed in categories.
QUANTITATIVE TRAIT: A trait in which
phenotypes show continuous (numerical) expression.
QUECHUA: A group of Indian peoples of Central
Peru. Original founders of the Incan civilization. Today, the
Quechuan people are the primary shepherds of alpaca in the
Altiplano.
QUINTAL: Hundred weight (metric system).
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