Which Bull?
Done it! This is Vatch Apollo, up in our top field with some of his cows (mostly out of picture!) last summer. He is non-short (tested non-carrier), polled, 9 years old and a real gem. And he is on this string for no other reason that I was determined to crack the problem of getting pics onto this site so the poor lad is also a guinea-pig. Take heart - if I can do it everyone can!! This is a separate post in case it didn't work.
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It is usual with twin pregnancies in cattle for the circulation of the two foetuses to mix due to overlap of the placentae, so that male hormones circulate in the female during the development of the genital organs, there is inhibition of development of the uterus and oviducts, the ovaries are very rudimentary. The development of the male is not adversely affected, so in twin bull and heifer sets the heifer is usually infertile but the bull ok. Twin heifer with heifer is ok, twin bull to bull is ok. Except of course if you breed with animals with a tendency to produce twins you will get more twins in later generations. There are various names for heifer twins to bulls, eg freemartins, Jenny Willocks, who can come up with some other local ones? 96% of heifer twins to bulls are infertile as a result of this. It is possible to have the blood tested to see if this is the case, but only 1 in 25 chance of getting the answer you want.
At the time Burnside Lemon and B. Lime were born I went through about 20 years of herd books and could only find a small handful of recorded twins, but of course there are more Dexters now so there will be more twins. Not only genetics but nutrition can influence production of twins. We have one dairy client who had 33 sets of Holstein twins in a herd of 150 one year, but this is exceptional.
Duncan
At the time Burnside Lemon and B. Lime were born I went through about 20 years of herd books and could only find a small handful of recorded twins, but of course there are more Dexters now so there will be more twins. Not only genetics but nutrition can influence production of twins. We have one dairy client who had 33 sets of Holstein twins in a herd of 150 one year, but this is exceptional.
Duncan
Duncan MacIntyre
Burnside Dexters 00316
Burnside
Ascog
Isle of Bute
Burnside Dexters 00316
Burnside
Ascog
Isle of Bute
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Quick question about twinning.
I am curious as to whether other species of animals have the same problems with male - female twins. We have had our first set of male-female twins from our sheep this year - we only have a small flock, for 2 seasons now, so not a lot of twin sets yet! :D These are from a cross bred ewe so both going to the freezer anyway, but am curious whether infertility in twins happens in other breeds. Would assume not in breeds that have litters (dogs, cats etc) and we don't tend to hear about it in humans, so just wondering!
Sorry to go slightly off thread - but I find it a fascinating subject!
I am curious as to whether other species of animals have the same problems with male - female twins. We have had our first set of male-female twins from our sheep this year - we only have a small flock, for 2 seasons now, so not a lot of twin sets yet! :D These are from a cross bred ewe so both going to the freezer anyway, but am curious whether infertility in twins happens in other breeds. Would assume not in breeds that have litters (dogs, cats etc) and we don't tend to hear about it in humans, so just wondering!
Sorry to go slightly off thread - but I find it a fascinating subject!
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Yes Jim, Bramble's purchase dated long before I really had made up my mind where I wanted my breeding to be going. I bought him because I was finding AI results less than encouraging and with a very small herd any sort of set back was major. I had no sooner bought him when some DCS council members asked if I would be willing to put him on AI since he was such a good bull. The same council members had sat round the sale ring when I bought him on one bid above a butcher. At the time I felt that if he was a good bull then he might be wasted in a herd of one or two cows and went ahead. In a way it was good for me because it got me more into the real workings of the DCS and I learned a lot. A short time after replacing him with a bull I thought might just be non-carrier (no DNA tests then) I had four bulldogs out of three females in less than 12 months and my lesson was learned. My next purchase was Woodmagic Black Bear, then Shilton Pontius, and my breeding aim changed to trying to produce non bulldog carriers of similar height to show type short legged Dexters. I would not now be involved in putting a short legged bull on AI. However although that is my breeding aim I have no wish to deny any short leg enthusiasts the right to pursue their aims as long as they are not stopping me with mine. The Dexter is a very diverse breed and needs a lot of tolerance and understanding amongst breeders.
Duncan
Duncan
Duncan MacIntyre
Burnside Dexters 00316
Burnside
Ascog
Isle of Bute
Burnside Dexters 00316
Burnside
Ascog
Isle of Bute
Thanks for the explaination Duncan. I too am interested in breeding a non-carrier small Dexter. I believe that I have read that it can sometimes take a practiced eye to see the difference between a small non-carrier and a carrier. I would love to see some comparitive photos of Dexters that are non-carriers yet as small as a shortleg Dexter if anyone can oblige.
TrueBlue Dexters
British Columbia, Canada
British Columbia, Canada