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Breeds of Cattle. Objectives. Identify breeds of cattle by characteristics. Identify breeds of cattle by picture. Recommend a breed of cattle to fit certain scenarios. . Why. Why do we need to be able to identify different breeds of cattle by characteristics?
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Objectives • Identify breeds of cattle by characteristics. • Identify breeds of cattle by picture. • Recommend a breed of cattle to fit certain scenarios.
Why • Why do we need to be able to identify different breeds of cattle by characteristics? • Why is it important to identify different breeds of cattle by looking at them? • Why is it important to be able to recommend a breed of cattle for different scenarios?
What • What are some different characteristics of cattle? • What are some identifying physical characteristics for different breeds of cattle?
Breeds of Cattle • Milking Breeds • Holstein • Jersey • Brown Swiss • Milking Shorthorn • Ayrshire • Guernsey
Holstein • Originated in the Netherlands • North Holland and Friesland. • Most common US dairy breed. • 90% of US dairy breed • Imported to US in 1850’s • Excellent grazers • Typical cow
Holstein • Largest dairy breed • 90 lbs. at birth • 1500lbs at muturity • Black and white or red and white • Docile cows • Aggressive bulls, high libido. • Outstanding milk production. • 17,408 lbs. milk/year • Lower butterfat content • 632 lbs. butterfat (3.63%)
Jersey • Origin- British Isle of Jersey • Brought to US in 1850’s • Mouse brown • Dark muzzle and switch • May have broken pattern (spots) • Small framed • Horned • Adaptable to wide range of climates • South Africa, Japan, Denmark, US, New Zealand
Jersey • Excellent for intensive grazing programs • Produce more lbs. of milk per lbs. of body weight than any other breed. • (16,000 lbs. from 900 lb. cow) • Very high in butterfat • (4.6% fat) • Nervous temperament compared to other dairy breeds. • Very masculine bulls • Least docile temperament of common breeds of cattle.
Brown Swiss • Origin-Switzerland • From Braunvieh cattle imported in 1869 by Henry M. Clark of Belmont, Mass. • Brown Swiss name coined in US 1906 • Very old breed. • Brown Swiss Cattle Breeders Association • Formed in 1880
Brown Swiss • Light to dark shades of brown. • Dark nose, eye pigment, hooves • Horned • Large furry ears • Long gestation • Structurally correct • Very docile (almost lestargic) • Average butterfat (4%)
Milking Shorthorn • Origin-NE England, Valley of Tees River • Imported to US in 1783 • Not declared a dairy breed until 1969 • Red, roan, white • Small framed • Easy calving • Very versatile • Lowe butterfat (3.8%)
Ayrshire • Origin-County of Ayr,Scotland • US in 1822 • Moderate butterfat (3.9%) • Dark, Magogany red and white. • Horned • Used to be very long (>1ft) and distinctive • Now dehorned as calves
Ayrshire • Medium framed • High quality udders • Efficient grazers • Structurally correct • 1929, 2 cows were walked from Vermont to St. Louis for National Dairy Show • Later calved and had outstanding milk production.
Guernsey • Origin-Isle of Guernsey, English Channel • Believed to have developed from French cattle • Brought to island by monks in 960 AD • Became a breed around 1700 • Brought to US in 1840
Guernsey • From light yellow to red or brown • White on belly, legs, and tail switch. • High butterfat content (4.7%) • Close to Jerseys • Yellow milk fat • High concentration of beta carotene • Cheese color • Golden Guernsey • Lower calving interval • Younger at first calf • Gentle disposition • Excellent grazers
Breeds of Cattle • Meat Breeds • Angus • Red Angus • Hereford • Polled Hereford • Limousin • Brangus • Shorthorn • Charolais • Belted Galloway • Beefmaster • Chianina • Santa Gertrudis • Texas Longhorn • Beefalo • Belgian Blue
Angus • Origin- Aberdeen county in Scotland • Imported to Kansas in 1873 • Black • Polled, small ears • Adapt well to cold weather • Small framed • Good mothers
Angus • Most popular breed of cattle in US • Over 280,000 registered in 2009 • Known for high quality carcasses • High marbling • Certified Angus Beef • Fatter carcasses
Red Angus • Originally part of Black Angus breed. • Removed from Angus herd book in 1917. • Red Angus Assoc. of America started in 1954 • RAAA led other breed Assoc. • Artificial Insemination • Performance Data • Promoted Crossbreeding • Commercial Breeders
Red Angus • Produced form recessive gene in Angus. • “English longhorns” crossed with black. • Same characteristics as Black Angus.
Hereford (Horned) • Origin-Herefordshire, England in 1742 • Came in US in 1817 • Henry Clay, Kentucky • Greatly improved post Civil War cattle • Red body, white face, brisket, tail switch. • Short down-turning horns
Hereford (Horned) • Medium framed • Docile dispositions • High fertility, easy calving • Early maturing • Hardy, easily adaptable • Less milk • The Rare Breed 1966 • Vindicator
Hereford (Polled) • Developed from horned herefords • Warren Gammon, Des Moines, IA – 1901 • Began Polled Hereford Club with 11. • Registry combined AHA • Polled gene • Dominant mutation • Docile fast growing • Similar to Herefords
Limousin • Origin- South, central France • Cave drawings over 20,000 years ago. • Imported to US from Canada • One bull for showing in 1968 • Bulls for permanent res. in 1971 • Bob Haag, Topeka, KS
Limousin • Originally horned • Now may be polled or horned • Originally golden-red in color. • Now also black due to upgrading with Angus • Light color around eyes and muzzle. • Medium to large framed • Heavy muscled, lean • Low marbling • Fast, efficient growers • Low milk production • Aggressive disposition • Developed docility EPD
Brangus • 5/8 Angus X 3/8 Brahman • Crossed in 1930s in LA, MS, OK, and TX • 1949- Formed American Brangus Breeders Association (now International) • Combination of heat tolerance and carcass characteristics • Hybrid vigor-traits of offspring exceed that of either parent
Brangus • Brangus claves were heavier, healthier. • Solid black • Polled • Hump, large ears • Good mothers • Meat still tough • Need less than ¼ Brahman
Shorthorn • Origin-Northeastern coast of England • US 1783 • Shorthorn Herd Bood-1846 • First breed registry in US • First used to improve Longhorn • Shorthorn • Wide-set eyes • Red, Roan, or white
Shorthorn • Over 30 breeds of cattle have shorthorn in %. • Angus, Santa Gertrudis, Milking Shorthorn • Small to moderate frame • Very docile disposition • Early maturing • Easily adaptable • Good mothers, hardy • High marbling
Belted Galloway • Developed from non-belted Galloway • Imported to US by Harry Prock 1950 to Pennsylvania • Polled • Small Framed • Hardy, undemanding, adaptable • Good natured • Good meat quality • Easy calving, good mothers. • Oreo cow/ Belties
Charolais • Origin-France • White cattle in region since 878 AD • Named for the Charolles region of France • First brought to Mexico after WWI-1930 • Imported to US from Mexico • King Ranch, TX 1936
Charloais • White, light straw, or light cream. • Red Allowed in registry • Pink nose and pale hooves • Horned • Fast growing • Heavy weaning and yearling weights • Medium to large framed • Older at puberty • Heavily muscled, coarse bodied. • Some calving problems • Low milk production
Beefmaster • Developed by Tom Lasaster, TX 1930’s • Brahman, Shorthorn, and Hereford genetics • Actual % not known • No emphasis on traits that do not affect carcass • Horns, hair coat • Generally brownish-red; not official color. • Recognized purebred 1954 • 5th largest breed registry in US • Good mothers, fertile
Chianina (Kee-a-nee-na) • Origin-West, central Italy • Developed as draft aniaml • Before Roman Empire • Discovered US soldiers WWII • Semen 1st imported 1971 CA • Bulls imported from Canada 1973
Chianina • White to steel hair coat • Can register any color • Short hair