Resilience expresses the ability of an individual to cope with short-term disturbances and to recover quickly by returning to the original level of performance. It can be measured by variance-based parameters and by the autocorrelation of daily milk yields in dairy cows. The design of resilience indicator traits and their heritabilities and genetic correlations have been studied in detail in recent years. There is a need to combine different resilience indicators in an index. The relevance of resilience indicator traits for incorporation into selection indices arises from their correlations with health traits and longevity. The correlations of diverse resilience indicator traits with health traits and longevity were analyzed. The resilience indicator traits were identified that would lead to the highest correlated selection response in the German selection index for health, and appropriate weights of the resilience indicator traits in a selection index for resilience were derived. Certain variance-based indicators were significantly positively correlated with most of the established health and functional traits, whereas the autocorrelation had a negligible correlation with these traits. A resilience selection index composed of 2 different variance-based resilience indicator traits was most likely to be recommended. Its correlation with overall performance was positive but moderately small. Incorporating more than 2 resilience indicator traits into the index improved the correlated response in health traits only slightly.
Keywords: autocorrelation; dairy cattle; resilience; resilience index; variance.
The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association®. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).