Relationship between production characteristics and breeding potential of 25-month old extensively managed Bonsmara bulls

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dc.contributor.author Scheepers, S.M. (Susanna Magrietha)
dc.contributor.author Annandale, C.H. (Cornelius Henry)
dc.contributor.author Webb, E.C. (Edward Cottington)
dc.date.accessioned 2010-09-28T06:31:21Z
dc.date.available 2010-09-28T06:31:21Z
dc.date.issued 2010
dc.description.abstract The aim of the study was to determine if the breeding potential of 25-month old Bonsmara beef bulls could be predicted from production characteristics. Forty-one Bonsmara bulls were included in an on-farm performance test (also known as the Phase D growth test) for a period of 180 days. At an average age of 24.7 months the bulls were subjected to a libido test and overall breeding soundness evaluation (OBE). The bulls were categorised into independent breeding potential categories according to the scores they obtained for the measured reproductive traits. The categories included sperm morphology and motility. One-way ANOVA revealed that none of the production traits measured had a significant effect on the different breeding potential categories. A positive correlation (r = 0.33) was recorded between pre-weaning growth rate and percentage morphologically normal sperm, while a negative correlation (r = -0.36) was recorded between total acrosomal- and flagellar sperm defects and pre-weaning growth. A positive correlation was demonstrated between sperm motility and pre-weaning growth (r = 0.36), and a consequent negative correlation (r = -0.38) between the percentage aberrant sperm movement and pre-weaning growth. The correlation between the percentage morphologically normal sperm and percentage progressively moving sperm was r = 0.50, while the correlation between percentage morphologically normal sperm and aberrant and immotile sperm was r = 0.48 for both variables. The number of total defects correlated highly significantly with flagellar and acrosomal defects (r = 0.72 and r = 0.93, respectively) and correlated poorly with the total number of nuclear defects (r = 0.32). These results suggest that total sperm defects were mainly due to acrosomal and flagellar defects, rather than nuclear defects and as the percentage morphologically normal sperm decreased, the motility also decreased. High growth rates before weaning may have a positive effect, while high growth rates after weaning may have a negative effect on the breeding potential of a bull. None of the measured reproductive and production traits had a significant effect on libido score and thus, cannot be used to predict the libido of young extensively maintained bulls. en
dc.identifier.citation Scheepers, SM, Annandale, CH & Webb, EC 2010, 'Relationship between production characteristics and breeding potential of 25-month old extensively managed Bonsmara bulls', South African Journal of Animal Science, vol. 40, no. 3, pp. 163-172. [http://www.sasas.co.za/] en
dc.identifier.issn 0375-1589
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/14932
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher South African Society for Animal Science en_US
dc.rights © South African Society for Animal Science en_US
dc.subject Bonsmara bulls en
dc.subject Breeding potential en
dc.subject Libido en
dc.subject Production parameters en
dc.subject Semen quality en
dc.subject.lcsh Beef cattle -- Breeding en
dc.subject.lcsh Bulls -- Performance records en
dc.subject.lcsh Spermatozoa en
dc.title Relationship between production characteristics and breeding potential of 25-month old extensively managed Bonsmara bulls en
dc.type Article en


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