Enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal genetics

The concept of sustainability, originating from the late 1980s, emphasises the ability to maintain processes over time without compromising future generations’ needs. It encompasses social, environmental and economic dimensions, although controversies persist regarding the latter’s inclusion. In the...

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Main Author: Juan Pablo Sánchez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitat Politècnica de València 2025-03-01
Series:World Rabbit Science
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Online Access:https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/22655
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author Juan Pablo Sánchez
author_facet Juan Pablo Sánchez
author_sort Juan Pablo Sánchez
collection DOAJ
description The concept of sustainability, originating from the late 1980s, emphasises the ability to maintain processes over time without compromising future generations’ needs. It encompasses social, environmental and economic dimensions, although controversies persist regarding the latter’s inclusion. In the case of rabbit production, the economic dimension is paramount to ensure the future sustainability of the sector, given the large number of threats, mainly economic, it is facing. The major challenge when considering social and environmental sustainability plans in breeding programmes is how to properly include these dimensions in the functions defining the relevance of the different traits to be considered during the development of specialised lines. Note however that the key drivers of the current economic sustainability of the sector: prolificacy, feed efficiency and some functional traits such as resilience and survivability, are also the most likely levers of the environmental and social components of sustainability. In this context, the development of specialised lines is the most valuable contribution to sustainability by animal geneticists, the maternal lines specialised in producing large amounts of healthy weaned kits and the terminal sire lines specialised in efficiently transforming feed into meat. Regarding feed efficiency, important milestones have been achieved in recent years, many of them related to the fact that kits are raised in collective cages, and under these rearing conditions, tools have been developed to measure feed intake at the individual level, as well as to explore the role that one individual imposes on their cage-mates. Despite the fact that genomic tools have been developed and used to explore the role of genomic regions of different traits of interest, this information is still far from being used in applied breeding programmes. In the near future, we could predict that breeding programmes for enhanced sustainability will still mainly rely on pedigree records and phenotypic information for prolificacy and feed efficiency; but enriching the list of available phenotypes with additional traits, most likely obtained under automatic recording systems, to explicitly account for the social and environmental sustainability plans. In this framework, omic tools will perform a valuable role for further investigation of the biological basis controlling the major drivers of rabbit production sustainability, and hopefully in the future this information could be directly incorporated into breeding programmes.
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spelling doaj-art-89a335c973f0466f9b4648b2e31ea3ff2025-08-20T02:50:00ZengUniversitat Politècnica de ValènciaWorld Rabbit Science1257-50111989-88862025-03-0133111110.4995/wrs.2025.2265521845Enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal geneticsJuan Pablo Sánchez0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8639-6146Institute of Agrifood Research and TechnologyThe concept of sustainability, originating from the late 1980s, emphasises the ability to maintain processes over time without compromising future generations’ needs. It encompasses social, environmental and economic dimensions, although controversies persist regarding the latter’s inclusion. In the case of rabbit production, the economic dimension is paramount to ensure the future sustainability of the sector, given the large number of threats, mainly economic, it is facing. The major challenge when considering social and environmental sustainability plans in breeding programmes is how to properly include these dimensions in the functions defining the relevance of the different traits to be considered during the development of specialised lines. Note however that the key drivers of the current economic sustainability of the sector: prolificacy, feed efficiency and some functional traits such as resilience and survivability, are also the most likely levers of the environmental and social components of sustainability. In this context, the development of specialised lines is the most valuable contribution to sustainability by animal geneticists, the maternal lines specialised in producing large amounts of healthy weaned kits and the terminal sire lines specialised in efficiently transforming feed into meat. Regarding feed efficiency, important milestones have been achieved in recent years, many of them related to the fact that kits are raised in collective cages, and under these rearing conditions, tools have been developed to measure feed intake at the individual level, as well as to explore the role that one individual imposes on their cage-mates. Despite the fact that genomic tools have been developed and used to explore the role of genomic regions of different traits of interest, this information is still far from being used in applied breeding programmes. In the near future, we could predict that breeding programmes for enhanced sustainability will still mainly rely on pedigree records and phenotypic information for prolificacy and feed efficiency; but enriching the list of available phenotypes with additional traits, most likely obtained under automatic recording systems, to explicitly account for the social and environmental sustainability plans. In this framework, omic tools will perform a valuable role for further investigation of the biological basis controlling the major drivers of rabbit production sustainability, and hopefully in the future this information could be directly incorporated into breeding programmes.https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/22655feed efficiencygenetic selectionanimal breedingnew phenotypesomic toolsrabbit
spellingShingle Juan Pablo Sánchez
Enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal genetics
World Rabbit Science
feed efficiency
genetic selection
animal breeding
new phenotypes
omic tools
rabbit
title Enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal genetics
title_full Enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal genetics
title_fullStr Enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal genetics
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal genetics
title_short Enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal genetics
title_sort enhancing the sustainability of rabbit production from the perspective of animal genetics
topic feed efficiency
genetic selection
animal breeding
new phenotypes
omic tools
rabbit
url https://polipapers.upv.es/index.php/wrs/article/view/22655
work_keys_str_mv AT juanpablosanchez enhancingthesustainabilityofrabbitproductionfromtheperspectiveofanimalgenetics