RANDOM MATING: The joining of animals on an
entirely random basis without regard to pedigree or phenotype.
RECESSIVENESS: See DOMINANCE.
RECOMBINATION: The formation of a new
combination of genes on a chromosome as a result of crossing
over.
REFERENCE SIRE: These sires leave offspring in
several, possibly all, of the cooperating flocks. The offspring
of the reference sires can then be compared with the offspring
of any other sires used in the same flock. Thus, the best males
in the whole of the group breeding scheme: 1) can be identified,
with the help of appropriate statistical programs; 2) can become
available to the scheme as a whole; and 3) can be used to breed
the next generation of males.
REPEATABILITY: (1) A measure of the strength
of the relationship between repeated records (repeated
phenotypic values) for a trait in a population. (2) A measure of
the strength of the relationship between single performance
records (phenotypic values) and producing abilities for a trait
in a population. (3) In dairy publications, accuracy of
prediction.
REPEATED BACKCROSSING: A mating system used to
incorporate an allele or alleles existing in one population into
another population. An initial cross is followed by successive
generations of backcrossing combined with selection for the
desired allele(s).
REPEATED TRAIT: A trait for which individuals
commonly have more than one performance record.
REPLACEMENT RATE: The rate at which newly
selected individuals replace existing parents in a population.
REPLACEMENT SELECTION: The process that
determines which individuals will become parents for the first
time.
ROAN: Animal coat color determined by a fairly
uniform mix of colored fibers. For example, the coat of a silver
alpaca is actually made up of intermittent black and white
fibers.
ROUND LOT: Standard, historical sale unit of
raw alpaca fiber which was made up of several colors in
agreed-upon percentages. The term is no longer used.
SEEDSTOCK: Breeding stock; animals whose role
is to be a parent or, in other words, to contribute genes to the
next generation.
SEGREGATION: The separation of paired genes
during germ cell formation.
SELECTION: The process that determines which
individuals become parents, how many offspring they may produce,
and how long they remain in the breeding population.
SELECTION ACCURACY: Also accuracy of breeding
value prediction. The measure of the strength of the
relationship between true breeding values and their predictions
for a trait under selection.
SELECTION CRITERIA: Phenotypic values or other
pieces of information that form the basis for selection
decisions.
SELECTION DIFFERENTIAL: The difference between
the mean selection criterion of those individuals selected to be
parents and the average selection criterion of all potential
parents, expressed in units of the selection criterion.
SELECTION INDEX: A linear combination of
phenotypic information and weighting factors used for genetic
prediction when performance data comes from generally similar
contemporary groups. See also economic selection index.
SELECTION INTENSITY: (1) A measure of how
particular breeders are in deciding which individuals are
selected. (2) The difference between the mean selection
criterion of those individuals selected to be parents and the
average selection criterion of all potential parents, expressed
in standard deviation units.
SELECTION RISK: The risk that the true
breeding values of replacements will be significantly poorer
than expected.
SELECTION SYSTEM: The method a breeder chooses
to select breeding stock.
SELECTION TARGET: A level of breeding value
considered optimal in an absolute or practical sense.
SIMPLY INHERITED TRAIT: A trait affected by
only a few genes.
SINGLE-TRAIT SELECTION: Selection for one
trait.
SIRE: A male parent.
SIRE SUMMARY: A list of genetic predictions,
accuracy values, and other useful information about the sires in
a breed.
SKEWBALD: Pinto; in the New Zealand color
study, an alpaca with white and brown patches.
SLIVERS: A continuous, untwisted strand or
rope of parallel alpaca fibers approximately uniform in
cross-section, produced by the carding and drawing process.
Carded slivers are blended prior to combing in the manufacture
of worsted yarn.
SOLES: Peruvian currency.
SPERM CELL: Gamete.
SPOTTING GENES: A gene which may control spots
or color pattern on an alpaca. The existence of a spotting gene
has not been scientifically verified.
STANDARD DEVIATION: A mathematical measure of
variation that can be thought of as an average deviation from
the mean. The square root of the variance.
STAPLE LENGTH: The length of a lock or length
of shorn alpaca fleece.
STAPLE: An organized independent group or
cluster of individual fibers. A large number of staples
constitute a fleece.
SURI: A breed of alpaca characterized by
lustrous locks of fleece that lay close to the body, twisting
vertically toward the ground.
SYNDACTYLISM: Having two or more toes fused
together.
TEMPORARY ENVIRONMENTAL EFFECT: An
environmental effect that influences a single performance record
of an individual but does not permanently affect the
individual's performance potential for a repeated trait.
TERMINAL SIRE: A paternal-breed sire used in a
terminal sire crossbreeding system.
TEST CROSS: Also test mating. A mating
designed to reveal the genotype of an individual for a small
number of loci.
TOPCROSSING: Grading up.
TOPS: A continuous, untwisted strand of combed
alpaca fibers from which the shorter fibers have been removed by
combing.
TRAIT: Any observable or measurable
characteristic of an individual.
TRAIT OF THE DAM: A trait in which each
progeny record is attributed to the dam, not the offspring.
TRAIT OF THE OFFSPRING: A trait in which each
record is attributed to an offspring, not to its dam. TUI: An
eighteen-month-old alpaca.
VALUE: Any measure applied to an individual as
opposed to a population. Examples are phenotypic value,
genotypic value, breeding value, and environmental effect.
VARIABILITY: The differences between animals
within a given population.
VARIATION: In most animal breeding
applications, the differences among individuals within a
population.
VICUNA: Native South American camelid, thought
to be the ancestor of the domesticated alpaca. Vicunas, which
exhibit the finest natural fiber in the world, can cross-breed
with alpacas.
YARA: Quechua word for the color black.
WOOLEN: Yarn made from fibers that are one to
three inches in length and that have been carded only. Fabrics
of woolen yarn are characterized as being fuzzy, thick, and
bulky.
WORSTED: Yam spun from fibers three inches in
length or longer that have been carded, combed, and drawn.
Combing machines straighten alpaca slivers, making the
individual fibers lie parallel.
YURAQ: Quechua word for the color white.
ZYGOTE: A cell formed from the union of male
and female gametes. A zygote has a full complement of genes -
half from the sperm and half from the egg.