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linebreeding

Linebreeding is a deliberate breeding practice in which individuals are mated to concentrate the genetic influence of a particular ancestor or lineage within a population. It is a milder form of inbreeding designed to preserve desirable traits associated with a known progenitor while avoiding the higher risk of close consanguinity that characterizes first- or second-degree matings.

In practice, linebreeding involves selecting matings where the common ancestor appears multiple times in the pedigree,

Applications exist in animal breeding (dogs, horses, cattle, poultry) and in plant breeding, where breeders seek

Benefits include increased predictability of inherited traits, preservation of valuable lineages, and maintenance of desirable characteristics

Risks include accumulation of deleterious recessive alleles, reduced genetic variability, inbreeding depression, and potential health or

Assessment is through pedigree analysis and metrics such as the inbreeding coefficient F and coancestry; linebreeding

Ethical and welfare considerations apply, and breeders often combine linebreeding with occasional outcrossing to restore diversity.

but
not
necessarily
in
every
generation,
creating
a
relationship
to
the
ancestor
that
is
stronger
than
the
average
population
but
looser
than
direct
parent-offspring
or
full-sibling
mating.
to
stabilize
features
such
as
conformation,
temperament,
or
yield.
across
generations.
It
can
also
help
concentrate
performance
traits
without
excessive
loss
of
genetic
diversity
if
managed
carefully.
fertility
issues
if
linebreeding
is
carried
too
intensively.
strength
is
described
by
the
linebreeding
coefficient
relative
to
the
common
ancestor.