Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk

Reproductive performance, mortality, growth, and culling and replacement rates based on 20000 calving records were evaluated for grade Boran beef cattle maintained with trypanocidal drugs in an area of high trypanosomiasis risk in Tanzania. Under ranching conditions, over a 10-year period in this ar...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Trail, J.C.M., Murray, M., Sones, Keith R., Jibbo, J.M.C., Durkin, J.W., Light, D.E.
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: Cambridge University Press 1985
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28827
_version_ 1855528379394031616
author Trail, J.C.M.
Murray, M.
Sones, Keith R.
Jibbo, J.M.C.
Durkin, J.W.
Light, D.E.
author_browse Durkin, J.W.
Jibbo, J.M.C.
Light, D.E.
Murray, M.
Sones, Keith R.
Trail, J.C.M.
author_facet Trail, J.C.M.
Murray, M.
Sones, Keith R.
Jibbo, J.M.C.
Durkin, J.W.
Light, D.E.
author_sort Trail, J.C.M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Reproductive performance, mortality, growth, and culling and replacement rates based on 20000 calving records were evaluated for grade Boran beef cattle maintained with trypanocidal drugs in an area of high trypanosomiasis risk in Tanzania. Under ranching conditions, over a 10-year period in this area of high Glossina morsitans morsitans, G. pallidipes and G. brevipalpis challenge, a calving interval of 15-9 months, pre-weaning mortality of 8%, annual cow mortality of 5-8% and 8-month weaning weight of 133-5 kg resulted in a herd productivity of 96 kg of weaner calf per cow per year. The proportion of heifers required as replacements (45%) and the generation interval (6-9 years) indicated scope for implementation of selection programmes on growth traits. The level of productivity achieved compared favourably with major data sets recently analysed from pure Boran cattle under trypanosomiasis-free ranching conditions in Kenya, and from trypanotolerant N'Dama cattle in West Africa. These results indicate the possibility of improving livestock production in tsetse-infested areas by the rational use of chemoprophylaxis as an integral part of management. Year, season, cow age, calf sex and location on ranch had significant effects on practically all the traits of calving interval, pre-weaning mortality and growth, and cow productivity. Superior performance where bush clearance and tsetse fly control had taken place suggests that economic evaluation of these interventions should be attempted. The season of calving had a major effect on productivity. Cows of 5--8 years of age were the most productive, as were animals producing male calves, features well recognized in beef cattle production. An average of 4-4 treatments with Samorin, a prophylactic, and 0-6 treatments with Berenil, a therapeutic, were required per year. The number of treatments varied from year to year and by area, being greater in the south of the ranch where the tsetse challenge was considered higher. However, the age and season of calving had little effect on the number of treatments required. Despite such extensive use of trypanocidal drugs, there was no indication that drug resistance had developed or evidence that repeated inoculation of Samorin had affected productivity. Grading-up of small East African Zebu cattle to Boran over an 8-year period allowed annual comparison of birth weights, pre-weaning growth and weaning weights of two groups of calves, one having a higher level of Boran genes (varying from 12 to 6% higher annually) than the other. Those with the higher level of Boran genes performed better by 3-3% for all attributes studied, but as the percentage difference in Boran genes decreased, so did this difference. In an environment improved through bush clearance and tsetse fly control, the calves with higher levels of Boran genes were superior, but this superiority was not expressed in the unimproved environment.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace28827
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 1985
publishDateRange 1985
publishDateSort 1985
publisher Cambridge University Press
publisherStr Cambridge University Press
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace288272024-11-15T08:52:37Z Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk Trail, J.C.M. Murray, M. Sones, Keith R. Jibbo, J.M.C. Durkin, J.W. Light, D.E. trypanosomiasis chemoprophylaxis reproductivity mortality productivity animal performance calving livestock management culling body weight farms sex seasons age samorin berenil reproduction cattle genetics Reproductive performance, mortality, growth, and culling and replacement rates based on 20000 calving records were evaluated for grade Boran beef cattle maintained with trypanocidal drugs in an area of high trypanosomiasis risk in Tanzania. Under ranching conditions, over a 10-year period in this area of high Glossina morsitans morsitans, G. pallidipes and G. brevipalpis challenge, a calving interval of 15-9 months, pre-weaning mortality of 8%, annual cow mortality of 5-8% and 8-month weaning weight of 133-5 kg resulted in a herd productivity of 96 kg of weaner calf per cow per year. The proportion of heifers required as replacements (45%) and the generation interval (6-9 years) indicated scope for implementation of selection programmes on growth traits. The level of productivity achieved compared favourably with major data sets recently analysed from pure Boran cattle under trypanosomiasis-free ranching conditions in Kenya, and from trypanotolerant N'Dama cattle in West Africa. These results indicate the possibility of improving livestock production in tsetse-infested areas by the rational use of chemoprophylaxis as an integral part of management. Year, season, cow age, calf sex and location on ranch had significant effects on practically all the traits of calving interval, pre-weaning mortality and growth, and cow productivity. Superior performance where bush clearance and tsetse fly control had taken place suggests that economic evaluation of these interventions should be attempted. The season of calving had a major effect on productivity. Cows of 5--8 years of age were the most productive, as were animals producing male calves, features well recognized in beef cattle production. An average of 4-4 treatments with Samorin, a prophylactic, and 0-6 treatments with Berenil, a therapeutic, were required per year. The number of treatments varied from year to year and by area, being greater in the south of the ranch where the tsetse challenge was considered higher. However, the age and season of calving had little effect on the number of treatments required. Despite such extensive use of trypanocidal drugs, there was no indication that drug resistance had developed or evidence that repeated inoculation of Samorin had affected productivity. Grading-up of small East African Zebu cattle to Boran over an 8-year period allowed annual comparison of birth weights, pre-weaning growth and weaning weights of two groups of calves, one having a higher level of Boran genes (varying from 12 to 6% higher annually) than the other. Those with the higher level of Boran genes performed better by 3-3% for all attributes studied, but as the percentage difference in Boran genes decreased, so did this difference. In an environment improved through bush clearance and tsetse fly control, the calves with higher levels of Boran genes were superior, but this superiority was not expressed in the unimproved environment. 1985-08 2013-05-06T07:01:30Z 2013-05-06T07:01:30Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28827 en Limited Access Cambridge University Press Trail, J. C. M., Murray, M., Sones, K., Jibbo, J. M. C., Durkin, J., & Light, D. (1985). Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk. The Journal of Agricultural Science, 105(1), 147–166. https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021859600055829
spellingShingle trypanosomiasis
chemoprophylaxis
reproductivity
mortality
productivity
animal performance
calving
livestock management
culling
body weight
farms
sex
seasons
age
samorin
berenil
reproduction
cattle
genetics
Trail, J.C.M.
Murray, M.
Sones, Keith R.
Jibbo, J.M.C.
Durkin, J.W.
Light, D.E.
Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk
title Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk
title_full Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk
title_fullStr Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk
title_full_unstemmed Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk
title_short Boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk
title_sort boran cattle maintained by chemoprophylaxis under trypanosomiasis risk
topic trypanosomiasis
chemoprophylaxis
reproductivity
mortality
productivity
animal performance
calving
livestock management
culling
body weight
farms
sex
seasons
age
samorin
berenil
reproduction
cattle
genetics
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/28827
work_keys_str_mv AT trailjcm borancattlemaintainedbychemoprophylaxisundertrypanosomiasisrisk
AT murraym borancattlemaintainedbychemoprophylaxisundertrypanosomiasisrisk
AT soneskeithr borancattlemaintainedbychemoprophylaxisundertrypanosomiasisrisk
AT jibbojmc borancattlemaintainedbychemoprophylaxisundertrypanosomiasisrisk
AT durkinjw borancattlemaintainedbychemoprophylaxisundertrypanosomiasisrisk
AT lightde borancattlemaintainedbychemoprophylaxisundertrypanosomiasisrisk