multiparent
Multiparent describes the use of more than two parental lines in a genetic cross, population design, or analysis. In genetics and breeding, multiparent approaches aim to capture a broader spectrum of genetic diversity and recombination by incorporating multiple founders rather than a single pair of parents.
In plant and animal breeding, multiparent designs create populations that trace ancestry to several founders, enabling
Common multiparent designs include Multi-Parent Advanced Generation Inter-Cross (MAGIC) populations and Nested Association Mapping (NAM) populations,
Advantages of multiparent populations include increased allelic diversity, higher recombination leading to finer mapping resolution, and
Challenges include more complex experimental design, larger population sizes, sophisticated statistical methods to infer ancestry and
Applications span crop and livestock genetics, including QTL mapping, genomic selection, and trait introgression in breeding