6533b7d0fe1ef96bd125b958
RESEARCH PRODUCT
MOESM13 of Conservation status and historical relatedness of Italian cattle breeds
Salvatore MastrangeloElena CianiPaolo Ajmone MarsanAlessandro BagnatoLuca BattagliniRiccardo BozziAntonello CartaGennaro CatilloMartino CassandroSara CasuRoberta CiampoliniPaola CrepaldiMariasilvia D’andreaRosalia GerlandoLuca FontanesiMaria LongeriNicolò MacciottaRoberto MantovaniDonata MarlettaDonato MatassinoMarcello MeleGiulio PagnaccoCamillo PieramatiBaldassare PortolanoFrancesca SartiMarco ToloneFabio Pillasubject
description
Additional file 13: Figure S7. Genetic relationship defined with multidimensional scaling analysis between Italian and 62 European cattle breeds. The breeds were grouped according to their geographical origins and distributions. Northern_Europe (Belgian Blue, Dexter, Kerry, Lithuanian Light Grey, Lithuanian White Backed, Groningen Whitehead, Lakenvelder, Meuse-Rhine-Ijjsel, Norwegian Red, Finnish Ayrshire, Belted Galloway, Galloway, Angus, Scottish Highland, South Devon), England (Devon, Guernsey, Hereford, Longhorn, Lincoln Red, Milking Shorthorn, Red Poll, Beef Shorthorn, Sussex, Welsh Blach, White Park), Spain (Berrenda en Negro, Berrenda en Colorado, Cardena Andaluza, Menorquina, Pirenaica, Morucha, Mostrenca, Negra Andaluza, Toro de Lidia), France (Abondance, Aubrac, Blonde D’Aquitaine, Bretonne Black Pied, Gascon, Maine-Anjou, Maraichine, Montbeliard, Normande, French Red Pied, Salers, Tarine, Tarentaise, Vosgienne), Germany (Gelbvieh), Switzerland (Simmental, Simmentaler, Braunvieh, Ehringer), Turkey (Anatolian Black, Anatolian Southern Yellow, East Anatolian Red, South Anatolian Red, Turkish gray, Zavot). Italian breeds are colored according to their geographical distributions and are the same as those described in Fig. 2; the European breeds are colored in gray.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2018-01-01 |