Factor analysis of body measurements of bulls of local cattle of Tripura, India
244 / 125
Keywords:
Biometric traits, Body conformation, Cattle, Principal component analysis, Local, TripuraAbstract
Eighteen different biometric traits (body length, height at wither, heart girth, paunch girth, arm length, elbow length, fore-shank length, thigh length, hind shank length, pes length, tail length, switch length, ear length, head length, eye to eye space, circumference of horn, space between horn and horn length) in 50 bulls of Tripura local cattle were recorded from 3 districts (viz. North Tripura, South Tripura and West Tripura) of Tripura, India and analyzed by Principal component analysis to explain body conformation. The average of these various traits indicates that local cattle Tripura is of smaller type of cattle breed. Factor analysis with promax rotation revealed six factors which explained about 76.64% of the total variation. Factor 1 described the general body conformation and explained 21.85% of total variation. It was represented by significant positive high loading of body length, height at wither, head length, circumference of horn, distance between horns and horn length. The communality ranged from 0.535 (head length) to 0.890 (fore-shank length) and unique factors ranged from 0.465 to 0.110 for all the 18 different biometric traits. The result suggests that principal component analysis (PCA) could be used in breeding programs with a drastic reduction in the number of biometric traits to be recorded to explain body conformation.Downloads
References
Gaur G K, Singh A, Singh P K and Pundir R K. 2004. Morphometric characteristics and present status of Ponwar cattle breed in India. AGRI. 34: 17–25. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1014233900001693
Johnson R A and Wichern D W. 1982. Applied multivariate statistical analysis. Prentice-Hall Inc., Englewood Cliffs, Nj.
Phanchung and Rodent J A. 1996. Characterisation of the Siri breed and Mithun cross Siri in Bhutan. AGRI 20: 27–34. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1014233900000857
Pundir R K, Singh P K, Singh K P and Dangi P S. 2011. Factor analysis of biometric traits of Kankrej cows to explain body conformation. Asian Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences 24(4): 449–56. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5713/ajas.2011.10341
Sadek M H, Al-Aboud A Z and Ashmawy A A. 2006. Factor analysis of body measurements in Arabian horses. Journal of Animal Breeding and Genetics 123: 369–77. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1439-0388.2006.00618.x
Singh G, Gaur G K, Nivsarkar A E, Patil G R and Mitkari K R. 2002. Deoni cattle breed of India. A study on population
dynamics and morphometric characteristics. AGAR 32: 35. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S101423390000153X
Singh S R, Mandal K G, Singh P K and Verma S B. 2010. Phenotypic characterization of Bachaur breed of cattle. Indian
Veterinary Journal 87: 893–95.
SPSS. 2001. Statistical Package for Social Sciences. SPSS Inc., 444 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, IL 60611.
Tolenkhomba T C, N Shyamsana Singh and Konsam D S. 2013. Principal component analysis of body measurements of bulls of local cattle of Manipur, India. Indian Journal of Animal Sciences 83(3): 49–52.
Tolenkhomba T C, Anal W, Singh N S and Mayengbam P. 2021a. Factor analysis of body measurements of Zobawng cows—a local hill cattle of Mizoram, India. International Journal of Livestock Research 11(4): 37–43. DOI: https://doi.org/10.5455/ijlr.20210204052559
Tolenkhomba T C, Anal W, Singh N S, Chaudhury J K and Mayengbam P. 2021b. Principal component analysis of body
measurements of Zobawng: a local cattle of Mizoram, India. Journal of Entomology and Zoology Studies 9(1): 2022–26.
Yakubu A, Ogah D M and Idahor K O. 2009. Principal component of the morphostructural indices of White Fulani cattle. Trakia Journal of Science 7(2): 67–73.
Downloads
Submitted
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2021 The Indian Journal of Animal Sciences

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
The copyright of the articles published in The Indian Journal of Animal Sciences is vested with the Indian Council of Agricultural Research, which reserves the right to enter into any agreement with any organization in India or abroad, for reprography, photocopying, storage and dissemination of information. The Council has no objection to using the material, provided the information is not being utilized for commercial purposes and wherever the information is being used, proper credit is given to ICAR.