Thoroughbred breeding theories

Thoroughbred breeding theories

Thoroughbred horse breeding theories run the gamut from the more common careful statistical analyses to the fanciful and the superstitious. The dream of the next legendary racehorse arising from the perfect pairing of sire and dam motivates the manager both for potential financial gain and for prestige. By careful analysis of bloodlines, particularly the female line, the potential breeder can attempt to predict beneficial pairings.

The female line

Thoroughbred horses are traced through the "distaff" or female line, known as their "family", dating to the beginning of the General Stud Book (GSB). This was done because the mares produce far fewer foals than stallions. Thoroughbred Stud Books around the world cite pedigrees in tail female style - meaning that the ancestry is traced through the maternal, rather than paternal, line.

Horses that come from “good’ families will usually command better prices than one with an inferior family, although they may not prove to be better as racehorses or sires/broodmares.cite book | last = Napier | first = Miles | title = Blood will tell: Orthodox breeding theories examined | publisher = J. A. Allen | date = 1977 | location = London | pages = p. 17-18] However, modern genetic studies have revealed that there are some cases where the haplotype in the mtDNA of modern Thoroughbreds differs from the stated dam line, suggesting that some records contain errors.cite web |url= http://www.tbheritage.com/GeneticMarkers/mtdnaintbdamlines3.html |title= Who's Your Momma III: Some Lines Misplaced |accessdate=2008-02-17 |author= Erigero, Patricia |work= Genetic Markers |publisher=Thoroughbred Heritage which cites cite journal |author=Hill, E. W. et.al. |year=2002 |title= History and Integrity of Thoroughbred Dam Lines Revealed in Equine mtDNA Variation |journal=Animal Genetics |volume=33 |pages=p. 287–294 |url= http://www.tbheritage.com/GeneticMarkers/HillAnimalGenetics.pdf |accessdate=2008-02-17|number=4 |doi= 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2002.00870.x]

History of breeding theories

Around 1895 an Australian, Bruce Lowe, wrote: “Breeding Racehorses by the Figure System”. This work formulated a system of family numbers from the GSB mares as explained by Lowe:

“The figures are derived from a statistical compilation of the winners of the three great English classic races, Derby, Oaks and St. Leger. The family with the largest number of wins is No. 1, the next No. 2 and so on up to No. 43, and include families whose descendants have not won a classic race.”cite book | last = Lowe | first = Bruce | coauthors = William Allison | title = Breeding Racehorses by the Figure System | publisher = The Field and Queen | date = 1977| location = London | pages = p. 42 | id = Facsimile]

He goes on to write:

“My own impression is that even these three great progenitors (referring to the 3 foundation sires) owe their survival and fame mostly to the female lines they were mated with. The Figure system is based mainly upon identifying and tracing the origin of these female lines”. cite book | last = Lowe | first = Bruce | coauthors = William Allison | title = Breeding Racehorses by the Figure System | publisher = The Field and Queen | date = 1977| location = London | pages = p. 2 | id = Facsimile]
Old Bald Peg (family 6) is one of the earliest tap-root dams, having been foaled around 1635. Most, if not all modern Thoroughbreds trace their ancestry to her through one or both sides of their pedigree. [cite web |url= http://archive.thisisyork.co.uk/2003/10/13/258161.html |title= Look here for racing's roots |accessdate=2008-02-14 |work=The Press] Many horses were linebred or inbred in early years, which increased the chances of early horses appearing in many Thoroughbred pedigrees today. [cite web |url= http://www.highflyer.supanet.com/inbreeding.htm |title= Inbreeding |accessdate=2008-02-14 |author= Hardiman, James R.] [cite web |url= http://www.wildhorseadvertising.com/ |title= Equine Business Marketing |accessdate=2008-02-14 |work=Wild Horse Advertising]

During the 1950’s Captain Kaziemierz Bobinski and Count Zamoyski produced the monumental work "Family Tables of Racehorses," [cite web |url= http://www.bloodlines.net/TB/Notes/ReferenceBooks.htm |title= Reference Books |accessdate=2008-02-14 |work=Bloodlines] commonly known as the Bobinski Tables. This work expanded Bruce Lowe's numbering system of 43 families and identified a total of 74 families tracing to mares in the GSB.cite web |url= http://www.tbheritage.com/GeneticMarkers/mtdnaintbdamlines.html |title= New Research Sheds Light on Old Pedigrees |accessdate=2008-02-17 |author= Erigero, Patricia |work= Genetic Markers |publisher=Thoroughbred Heritage which cites cite journal |author=Hill, E. W. et.al. |year=2002|number=4 |title= History and Integrity of Thoroughbred Dam Lines Revealed in Equine mtDNA Variation |journal=Animal Genetics |volume=33 |pages=p. 287–294 |url= http://www.tbheritage.com/GeneticMarkers/HillAnimalGenetics.pdf |accessdate=2008-02-17 |doi= 10.1046/j.1365-2052.2002.00870.x ] There were mares in several countries whose pedigrees had been lost or whose descendants had been bred up from Arabians etc and were unacceptable to the GSB at the time of Lowe’s work. The Family Table of Racehorses expanded research into these female families of racehorses including:

* Families A1-A37 descend from American Stud Book mares who cannot be traced to the GSB
* Families Ar1-Ar2 are Argentine families
* Families B1-B26 trace directly to Prior's Half-Bred Studbook
* Families C1-C16 are described in the Australian Stud Book as approved Colonial Families
* Families C17-C33 descend from Australian and New Zealand mares who cannot be traced to the GSB
* Families P1-P2 are Polish families

Bobinski later updated his works and split Lowe's families into sub categories. [cite web |url= http://www.bloodlines.net/TB/Families/Family1.htm |title= Family Tables |accessdate=2008-02-17 |work=Bloodlines] Today, these numbers often follow a horse’s name in sale catalogues and pedigrees, much like a numerical surname and are very helpful for checking the accuracy of pedigrees and comparing the contributions made by various mares and families.cite book | last = Wicks| first = B.M| title = The Australian Racehorse: An Introduction to Breeding | publisher = Libra Books | date = 1973 | location = Canberra| pages = p. 16]

References

ee also

* Thoroughbred
* Horse breeding


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