scholarly journals Effects of Sire Birth Weight on Calving Difficulty and Maternal Performance of Their Female Progeny

2000 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 729-732
Author(s):  
U. Paputungan ◽  
M. Makarechian ◽  
M. F. Liu
1981 ◽  
Vol 21 (109) ◽  
pp. 137 ◽  
Author(s):  
DR Gifford ◽  
PC Stephens ◽  
RJ Lampe ◽  
RW Ponzoni ◽  
HR Day

The reproductive and maternal performance of Hereford and Friesian x Hereford dams and the growth and carcase characteristics of their Hereford- and Friesian-sired calves in the Mediterranean environment of South Australia are reported. The two dam breeds did not differ in fertility and their calves had similar mortality rates. Even though calves from Hereford dams were lighter at birth than those from crossbred dams (30.8 vs 33.0 kg), Hereford dams required more assistance at calving (16% vs 8%). There were no differences in birth weight and incidence of calving difficulty of Hereford- and Friesian-sired progeny, but Friesian-sired progeny had a higher mortality rate (11% vs 5%). Calves from crossbred dams were heavier at weaning than those from Hereford dams (274 vs 235 kg) but Hereford- and Friesian-sired progeny were the same weight at weaning. Friesian-sired steers were heavier than Hereford-sired steers at 19- 21 months of age (478 vs 448 kg). The carcase characteristics of progeny of the two dam breeds did not differ significantly at either slaughter age. There were no significant differences in carcase characteristics of Hereford- and Friesian sired progeny slaughtered at 8- 10 months of age. When progeny were slaughtered at 19- 21 months of age, carcases of Friesian-sired steers were heavier (238 vs 222 kg) and leaner (0.49 vs 0.86 mm) than those of Hereford-sired steers. The practical implications of the use of Hereford and Friesian breeds in the southern Australian beef industry are discussed.


2008 ◽  
Vol 53 (No. 5) ◽  
pp. 187-194 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Bureš ◽  
L. Bartoň ◽  
R. Zahrádková ◽  
V. Teslík ◽  
M. Fiedlerová

This study was conducted to evaluate the body weights and measurements of 86 Gascon calves and their dams. The effects of the course of parturition, parity of the dams, sex of the calves, and live- or stillborn calves were analysed. Phenotypic correlations between different measurements and calf birth weight as well as the course of parturition were calculated. Internal pelvic measurements were significantly associated with the occurrence of assisted calvings and stillborn calves. Primiparous cows had a smaller pelvic area, lower live weight, and more frequent difficulty in calving compared to older cows. A higher incidence of difficult calvings was observed in bull-calves due to their higher (<I>P</i> < 0.001) birth weight. High and significant correlation coefficients were determined between the birth weight and body measurements of the calves as well as between the calf birth weight and the course of parturition (<I>r</i> = 0.34; <I>P</i> < 0.01). Negative correlations (<I>r</i> = –0.21 to –0.30) were calculated between the internal pelvic measurements of the cows and the course of parturition score. It was concluded that the internal pelvic measurements of the dam and the size and shape of the calf were the factors influencing the course of parturition in this study to the largest extent.


1966 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 261-266 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Doney

Four Scottish Blackface rams were mated with a group of their own daughters and a similar number of non-related ewes. The matings were made in three successive years. All ewes were maintained under normal hill conditions. Female progeny from the matings entered the ewe flock unculled. Records of birth type, birth weight, fleece and live-weights throughout life were obtained.Inbred lambs had lower mean values for all measured characters than did their non-inbred half-sibs and there was a greater number of apparently barren ewes amongst the flock ewes which were expected to produce inbred lambs. The inbred progeny, also maintained in the normal hill flock, showed a higher incidence of barrenness and lower lamb survival rates at all ages than did their non-inbred contemporaries in the same environment. In the final year of the observations, when the standard of nutrition during late pregnancy was raised, the neo-natal mortality rate in both groups was reduced.


2004 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 375-383 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Eriksson ◽  
A. Näsholm ◽  
K. Johansson ◽  
J. Philipsson

1993 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-83 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. A. Morris ◽  
R. L. Baker ◽  
S. M. Hickey ◽  
D. L. Johnson ◽  
N. G. Cullen ◽  
...  

AbstractA total of 161 bulls from 11 breeds were used to generate crossbred calves from Angus cows in 1973 to 1977 at each of three diverse New Zealand locations, and from Hereford cows at one of the locations in the same years. The bulls comprised four local breeds, Angus, Friesian, Hereford, and Jersey, and seven recently imported breeds, Blonde d'Aquitaine, Charolais, Chianina, Limousin, Maine Anjou, Simmental and South Devon. This paper reports the reproductive and maternal performance of the straightbred and first-cross cows over the first four calvings, with first mating as yearlings at 14 to 16 months of age. A total of 7575 mating records from 2109 cows were analysed. Location differences were greater for reproduction than for growth traits and resulted in genotype × environment interactions for some components of cow performance and particularly the composite traits, weight of calf weaned per cow joined (productivity) and cow ‘efficiency’ (the ratio of productivity to cow weight). At all locations the Friesian-cross cows weaned the greatest weight of calf per head but were matched or surpassed by the lighter Jersey crosses in terms of efficiency of calf production. Most of the European crosses performed relatively much better in the most favourable environment than in the harsh environment and this was particularly marked for the productivity of Simmental crosses. Heterosis as a proportion of the purebred mean was important for cow performance and particularly pregnancy rate (0·12), productivity (0·21) and the efficiency ratio (0·16). Heritabilities for weight and age at puberty were both 0·34 (s.e. 0·08). Repeatabilities and heritabilities for cow reproductive traits were low (0·0 to 0·10) but higher for calf weights up to weaning as a trait of the cow (0·09 to 0·38). In general, the large European breeds which excelled in growth and carcass production produced female progeny which reached puberty at greater ages, had lower reproductive performance (especially in less favourable environments) and larger mature size. Some breed utilization strategies to achieve trade-offs between these genetic antagonisms are discussed.


2004 ◽  
Vol 82 (2) ◽  
pp. 375-383
Author(s):  
S. Eriksson ◽  
A. Näsholm ◽  
K. Johansson ◽  
J. Philipsson

2002 ◽  
Vol 82 (1) ◽  
pp. 19-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. R. Tozer ◽  
D. L. Scollard ◽  
T. L. Marsh ◽  
T. J. Marsh

The purpose of this study was to use readily available information, including dam pelvic width (PW) and height (PH) and the fetal coronet band (CB) measurement to predict the calving difficulty (CD) score of first-calf heifers under commercial ranch conditions. Data were collected from a cow-calf ranch over a 3-yr period. Using a recursive system of equations, two models were estimated. First, a linear model was used to predict birth weight (BTW) based on the fetal CB measurement. Second, an ordered logit model was used to predict calving difficulty score based on a nonlinear relationship with birth weight, pelvic dimensions of the dam, and interaction terms. The linear model demonstrated that BTW could be predicted using the CB measurement, both the intercept and slope coefficients were significant at P < 0.001. The model R2 was equal to 0.57 and the standard error of the predicted birth weight was 2.77 kg. The ordered logit model correctly predicted 468 of 684 (68.4%) of the CD scores. The results of this research suggest that it is possible to predict dystocia or calving difficulty on a case-by-case basis with information that is available to ranchers or ranch managers early in the parturition process. The management technique presented has been successfully adopted by some large-scale cow-calf operations, thus the results have commercial applications for beef producers. Key words: Dystocia, heifers, beef, recursive systems, ordered logit, coronet band, birth weight


2018 ◽  
Vol 63 (No. 8) ◽  
pp. 323-330
Author(s):  
Nienartowicz-Zdrojewska Anna ◽  
Sobek Zbigniew ◽  
Różańska-Zawieja Jolanta

Research material included data on gestation length of 15 436 cows of Polish native breeds. These were: White Backed (BG; 324 records), Polish Red (RP; 5396 records), Polish Black and White (ZB; 3508 records), and Polish Red and White (ZR; 6208 records). The calvings took place in 2005–2009, and we analysed two calving seasons, lactation number, the degree of calving difficulty, sex, and body weight of newborn calves. The effect of birth year on gestation length and birth weight of offspring was statistically significant, whereas calving season had statistically highly significant effect on both. Gestation length in the analysed breeds was 281.02, 283.35, 280.5, 281.53 for BG, RP, ZB, and ZR, respectively. The birth body weight heritability was 0.13 (RP), 0.33 (ZB) and 0.40 (ZR).


1969 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-51
Author(s):  
J. W. B. King ◽  
Z. Gajić

SUMMARYRepeatability estimates for various maternal characteristics were calculated for 301 inbred, 150 outbred and 135 linecross Large White sows each with two litters. The estimated repeatabilities did not differ significantly between the three kinds of sow and the arithmetic average of the values obtained were as follows: number of pigs born alive 0·24; number of pigs born dead 0·05; total birth weight of litter 0·25; average individual birth weight 0·41; number of pigs alive at 50 days 0·07; total litter weight at 50 days 0·14; average individual weight at 50 days 0·15.The linecross sows produced and weaned more pigs than the outbred sows, which in turn performed better than the inbred sows. Changes in performance from the first to the second litter were similar for all three groups of sows.


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