February 2018 |
However, as it turned out, No. 830 stayed in the County Line herd, making the move to and from summer pasture with its contemporaries. When we sold most of the 2018 calves this past February, we kept No. 830 at home in a pen of other misfits - cows who had swollen jaws but hadn't yet had or raised their latest offspring or old cows who would be culled from the herd after they raised their babies.
But last week, we rounded up this ragtag band of brothers and sisters and took some of them to Pratt Livestock. No. 830 was one of those that went through the sale barn.
However, our veterinarian Bruce Figger provided a fact sheet about Developmental Duplication from the American Angus Association. The abnormality has been long observed in Angus cattle. It was previously thought to be caused by conjoined twins or other anomalies during fetal development.
Instead, it was found to be a simply inherited recessive genetic condition passed through certain lines of Angus cattle. Animals affected with this condition can sometimes be born with an extra limb or part of an extra limb, a condition referred to as polymelia.
February 2018 |
The calf had its four limbs in the right place, and it moved just as freely as the other babies born during the same season. (Check out the video I took that winter of the calf and his mother.)
6-footed calf from Kim Fritzemeier on Vimeo.
I took the photo below when we worked baby calves in the spring of 2018, and it was doing great. At that time, I wrote another blog post.
March 21, 2018 |
August 21, 2019 |
We got the check in the mail yesterday. No. 830 had weighed 715 pounds and brought in a measly $311 check, about the same amount that the cow with lump jaw had garnered. And so the story ends - gone, but probably not forgotten for awhile.
Is it possible to trace back to line the calf came from, assuming this condition is something to be avoided?
ReplyDeleteIf we knew which bull was the father, it would have been. However, there were three bulls in the pasture that the mother was in. Since we don't raise purebred stock for breeding, Randy didn't see a need to trace it. By the time for breeding next year, only one of the Angus bulls that could have been the father will remain in our herd. We will have replaced the other two. The cost for DNA tests and the time involved would have been prohibitive.
DeleteAn extra leg doesn't seem to have inhibited No 830's growth. A shame about the check. Was the market price down or less because of their 'looks'?
ReplyDeleteThe price was definitely a reflection of its deformity.
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