Reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of European inheritance in Ethiopia

The effect of levels of upgrading of indigenous Ethiopian cows on the reproductive performance and herd life of crossbreds with different levels (50, 75, and 87.5%) of European inheritance were evaluated. Genetic and non genetic factors affecting herd life and reproductive performance traits such as...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Negussie, E., Brannang, E., Rottmann, O.J.
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Ethiopian Society of Animal Production 2000
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51018
_version_ 1855528617995403264
author Negussie, E.
Brannang, E.
Rottmann, O.J.
author_browse Brannang, E.
Negussie, E.
Rottmann, O.J.
author_facet Negussie, E.
Brannang, E.
Rottmann, O.J.
author_sort Negussie, E.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description The effect of levels of upgrading of indigenous Ethiopian cows on the reproductive performance and herd life of crossbreds with different levels (50, 75, and 87.5%) of European inheritance were evaluated. Genetic and non genetic factors affecting herd life and reproductive performance traits such as age at first calving (AFC), number of services per conception (NSC), days open (DO), gestation length (GL), and calving interval (CI) were also assessed. The results obtained showed that there is a significant difference in the reproductive performance among the different groups of crossbreds. Overall, F1 crosses were better than the rest of the crossbred groups. Among the first crosses, Jersey crosses were found to be the best. In general, upgrading indigenous breeds to higher levels (>50% Bos taurus inheritance) resulted in late AFC, more number of services required per conception, longer calving intervals and early removal of cows from the herd completing small number of lactation. Therefore, under tropical conditions, where the seasonal nature of feed availability and incidence of diseases limit high production, upgrading indigenous breeds to 50% European inheritance would be promising (especially with Jersey sires). Upgrading to 75% would also be suggested provided the level of management is good enough to meet the relatively higher environmental demand of these animals.
format Conference Paper
id CGSpace51018
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2000
publishDateRange 2000
publishDateSort 2000
publisher Ethiopian Society of Animal Production
publisherStr Ethiopian Society of Animal Production
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace510182023-02-15T09:37:21Z Reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of European inheritance in Ethiopia Negussie, E. Brannang, E. Rottmann, O.J. dairy cattle reproductive performance crossbreds seasons genetic inheritance The effect of levels of upgrading of indigenous Ethiopian cows on the reproductive performance and herd life of crossbreds with different levels (50, 75, and 87.5%) of European inheritance were evaluated. Genetic and non genetic factors affecting herd life and reproductive performance traits such as age at first calving (AFC), number of services per conception (NSC), days open (DO), gestation length (GL), and calving interval (CI) were also assessed. The results obtained showed that there is a significant difference in the reproductive performance among the different groups of crossbreds. Overall, F1 crosses were better than the rest of the crossbred groups. Among the first crosses, Jersey crosses were found to be the best. In general, upgrading indigenous breeds to higher levels (>50% Bos taurus inheritance) resulted in late AFC, more number of services required per conception, longer calving intervals and early removal of cows from the herd completing small number of lactation. Therefore, under tropical conditions, where the seasonal nature of feed availability and incidence of diseases limit high production, upgrading indigenous breeds to 50% European inheritance would be promising (especially with Jersey sires). Upgrading to 75% would also be suggested provided the level of management is good enough to meet the relatively higher environmental demand of these animals. 2000 2014-10-31T06:21:59Z 2014-10-31T06:21:59Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51018 en Limited Access Ethiopian Society of Animal Production
spellingShingle dairy cattle
reproductive performance
crossbreds
seasons
genetic inheritance
Negussie, E.
Brannang, E.
Rottmann, O.J.
Reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of European inheritance in Ethiopia
title Reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of European inheritance in Ethiopia
title_full Reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of European inheritance in Ethiopia
title_fullStr Reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of European inheritance in Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of European inheritance in Ethiopia
title_short Reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of European inheritance in Ethiopia
title_sort reproductive performance and herd life of crossbred dairy cattle with different levels of european inheritance in ethiopia
topic dairy cattle
reproductive performance
crossbreds
seasons
genetic inheritance
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/51018
work_keys_str_mv AT negussiee reproductiveperformanceandherdlifeofcrossbreddairycattlewithdifferentlevelsofeuropeaninheritanceinethiopia
AT brannange reproductiveperformanceandherdlifeofcrossbreddairycattlewithdifferentlevelsofeuropeaninheritanceinethiopia
AT rottmannoj reproductiveperformanceandherdlifeofcrossbreddairycattlewithdifferentlevelsofeuropeaninheritanceinethiopia