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Much
controversy and secrecy revolves around discussion and use of
blue-eyed white alpacas (BEWs) in breeding programs. Blue-eyed
white alpacas are all-white alpacas, with blue eyes, which are
often (but not always) deaf. Recently some alpaca farmers have
suggested that the BEWs should not be used for breeding so this
gene can be eliminated from the American alpaca gene pool. This
suggestion reflects some of the misinformation that surrounds
the issue of BEWs. This article will discuss the genetics of
BEWs. What we know about the genetics, given the paucity of
reliable breeding data on the subject, is limited because some
farms don’t acknowledge if their herdsire or dam has ever thrown
a BEW, and relatively few BEWs are actually ARI registered (an
when registered they are registered as white not BEW).
In
understanding BEWs a little background in genetics is necessary.
A phenotype is the physical expression or appearance of a
gene. The genetic code for the phenotype is called the
genotype. Alleles are variant forms of a gene. The
white-spot gene (suggested by Sponnenberg, 19??) has many
variants (alleles). Allele variants include a white spot
anywhere on the animal, white-face, tuxedo, white legs, pinto,
etc.. The white spot gene may also be responsible for the roan
or grey phenotype (grey alpacas) and possibly even the
multi-color phenotype. These different phenotypes are due to
apparently dominant alleles. Each parent passes on one allele
from each gene in their gametes (sperm and egg cells). One copy
is in the sperm and one copy is in the egg. The fertilized egg
ends up with one copy from each parent. Dominant alleles mask
(override) recessive alleles. This means if both alleles are
present, only the dominant allele’s phenotype is seen. This
means an alpaca only needs to get one copy of the gene for the
trait to show up in the phenotype. However, an alpaca born with
two copies of these dominant alleles (like gray, white faced,
tuxedo) produces a new (additive) phenotype, a BEW, or may not
be born at all (Liz Paul believes grey by grey mating produce a
lethal combination 1/4 of the time, and these are aborted, Paul
2003). It seems that BEWs occur when a cria receives a
white-spot allele and/or roaning/graying allele from both
parents. To see what possible outcomes exist for any breeding,
it is easiest to create a Punnet Square that shows the possible
allele combinations for the offspring of any mating.
In
a mating of a white faced black dam and a solid black sire:
S = solid
colored (S/S)
WF = white faced animal (WF/S)
|
Male Gamete |
Female Gamete |
| |
WF |
S |
| S |
WF/S |
S/S |
| S |
WF/S |
S/S |
So half
the offspring will be white-faced and half will be solid
colored. Something different happens when both parents have
white-spot alleles. Some offspring will receive two copies of
dominant alleles. These will have the blue-eyed white
phenotypes.
In a mating of a white faced black dam and a silver grey sire:
S = solid
colored animal (S/S)
WF = white faced animal (WF/S)
G = grey animal (G/S)
|
Male Gamete |
Female Gamete |
| |
WF |
S |
| G |
WF/G |
G/S |
| S |
WF/S |
S/S |
So 1/4
will be BEWs (the WF/G), 1/4 will be grey (G/S), 1/4 will be
white-faced (WF/S) and 1/4 will be normal (S/S, solid colored).
That is how BEWs can be created. It is important to note that
some all-white animals have white spots on them, but you cannot
see white markings on a white animal. Also, one version of the
white spot gene is an all white animal (think of it as a white
spot that covers the whole body). So it is possible to get BEWs
from all-white’s bred to white-spot or grey animals. Also, it is
possible that an animal has a TINY white marking that you cannot
see, or easily see. I have seen animals that threw a BEW that
appeared solid, but upon close examination, a tiny white spot
was found between the toes.
The
question then remains, what happens when you breed a BEW? Should
you use one in your breeding program? If the above scenario is
correct, then BEWs should always contribute a white-spot allele
or roaning/graying allele to a breeding. Therefore, if you breed
a BEW to a non-white, solid animal, you should not get a BEW
cria from the breeding, but all cria are likely to have
white-spot or grey/roan markings.
For
example: in a mating between a BEW female (created in the
breeding above) with a solid colored black sire:
BEW = Blue
eyed white animal (WF/G)
S = solid colored animal (S/S)
|
Male Gamete |
Female Gamete |
| |
WF |
G |
| S |
WF/S |
G/S |
| S |
WF/S |
G/S |
The result
would be 1/2 white-faced cria, 1/2 grey cria. No BEWs. Remember
apparently solid animals may hide a white spot, and all-white
animals often hide white markings or are a white spot variant
(all-white) themselves.
Now you
have an educated guess as to the risks of breeding for making a
BEW and for what a BEW animal might throw.
What
causes the BEW phenotype? This is conjecture based on what we
know from other species. We know that most fiber and skin color
is due to the presence of melanin (phaemelanin and eumelanin) in
the tissue. Melanin migrates through the body during
development. Melanin is also a critical structural component of
cells, including hairs in the cochlea in the inner ear. Failure
of melanin to reach these cochlear hairs results in their death
soon after birth, and deafness. Similarly, failure of pigment
cells to reach the cells that will become the eyes leads to blue
eyes. Melanin is distributed by the growing neural crest during
embryonic development. Melanin is produced from cells called
melanocytes that migrate outward in the expanding neural crest.
Melanin is produced in melanocytes from tyrosine (an amino acid)
by the enzyme tyrosinase.
White spot
alleles may or may not include roaning/graying and multi-color
phenotypes. Most greys are also white faced (many with tuxedos,
white legs, and other patterns). Some greys however have no
white markings at all (these are less common, and it is not
known if they can throw BEWs). It is therefore likely that the
white spot gene and the roan/grey gene are not the same gene,
but two genes very close to each other on the same chromosome.
They are so close that the alleles of these two different genes
are almost always transmitted together (so grey and white faced
usually occur together). Occasionally, during meiosis,
recombination occurs (crossing over between homologous maternal
and paternal chromosomes) and the grey and white spot alleles
can be separated, leading to the rare whiteless greys. I am
still investigating what multis are and what the likely outcomes
of breedings with multis will produce.
Returning
to the risks of using white spot allele and roan/grey animals in
the breeding program. BEWs themselves should not produce more
BEWs unless they are bred to BEW or roan/grey animals or other
white-spot allele animals. To eliminate BEWs from the gene pool
completely we would have to eliminate all greys, white-spotted
and pattern animals. Then a good fraction of the white animals
would still have white spot alleles. Do we want to eliminate
whites, greys, and white spotted animals? I don’t. Animals with
white-spot often attract many farm visitors because of their
distinctive markings. Greys are beautiful and some of the
highest selling alpacas. Other countries breeding programs are
breeding for all-white fiber animals (which can be dyed to any
color). There is already some prejudice in some other breeding
programs against any animals with nonsolid markings because it
is difficult to process for fiber mills (colors must be
separated prior to spinning and processing). Since the US is not
yet a fiber market, but rather a are livestock market, we are
not necessarily breeding for all-white solid animals. Some in
the US have been pushing natural colors, rather than dyed
colors.
My
prognosis is: I don’t usually use herdsires, with white-spot
since offspring that have white-spot have more limited
considerations with breedings (risk of BEW taking them to gray,
and white). In Europe, these animals are devalued on the market
(even though no one processes the face fiber anyway where the
white spot often ends up), and in fact, other than greys and
suris, there are very few white-spot herdsires in use. AOBA
fleece judging also penalizes color variation in the blanket. I
have no problem with using white faced or grey females in a
breeding program (we have a lovely white faced Nic-Nac daughter
in our foundation herd that is spectacular). Bred to solids,
they will produce 50% solid cria and 50% white spot cria. Greys
are very trendy right now, and often command top-dollar at
auctions. They are also the rarest color combination, increasing
their value for both males and females. Breed them to only
solid-colored, non-white animals if you don’t want to risk BEWs.
So it is
up to you and your breeding program goals. Personally, I would
happily breed BEW females to solid non-white males. I would not
likely breed a BEW male at all. Eliminating a BEW from the
breeding program removes two copies of the white-spot gene from
the gene pool, but unless we are also removing greys and other
white-spot animals from the breeding program, it will have a
negligible effect on the overall level of white markings and
BEWs in the North American gene pool.
Copyright
2003
– These
articles appeared previously in Alpacas Magazine, AlpacaWorld,
and the PAOBA Planet respectively, and the first one was also
reprinted in International Camelids Quarterly. All are
co-authored by myself and my wife, Ann Merriwether.
| About
the Authors:
Dr.
Andrew Merriwether is an associate professor of anthropology
at Binghamton University. Dr. Merriwether received a BA in
Medical Anthropology and a BS in Biology from Penn State
(1988), an MS in Genetics from Penn State (1989) and a Ph.D.
in Human Genetics from the University of Pittsburgh (1993).
From 1996 to 2003, Dr. Merriwether was an assistant
professor of Anthropology and of Ecology and Evolutionary
Biology at the University of Michigan, as well as faculty
member in the program of Statistical Genetics and the
program of Molecular and Clinical Epidemiology of Infectious
Disease. His research has involved human and animal
molecular evolution, population genetics and genetic
adaptation, including ancient DNA investigations on the
origins of camelid domestication in South America.
Andy
and his wife Ann (a developmental psychologist at Binghamton
University) own Nyala Farm Alpacas in Vestal, NY and 13
alpacas at the time of writing this article. More
information on their farm, breeding program, and genetic
services offered can be found at
http://www.merriwether.org/nyala/.
Visit Nyala Farm Alpacas at
http://www.merriwether.org/nyala/
or our
AlpacaNation
farm site. |
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