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Artificial Insemination (AI) for Cattle
7 degrees of separation: The angus breed of the future?
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<blockquote data-quote="wbvs58" data-source="post: 1507185" data-attributes="member: 16453"><p>Some lines in the Angus breed have been heavily used for their attributes and genetic problems have cropped up but big deal, in this day and age they are very easy to manage and with testing and breeding away from the defects you very quickly drift away from having any carriers at very little financial cost and yet still can retain the attributes of those genetics you were chasing.</p><p></p><p>It seems that whenever a new defect comes out you have those people beating their chests bragging how they were too smart to get caught up with chasing those lines and their herd is free of those defects, well I say "bully" to them, I hope they get what they are looking for out of the genetics they are chasing.</p><p></p><p>I have yet to see any of these genetic defects have any significant effect on the actual end user, the commercial cattle producer.</p><p></p><p>Ken</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="wbvs58, post: 1507185, member: 16453"] Some lines in the Angus breed have been heavily used for their attributes and genetic problems have cropped up but big deal, in this day and age they are very easy to manage and with testing and breeding away from the defects you very quickly drift away from having any carriers at very little financial cost and yet still can retain the attributes of those genetics you were chasing. It seems that whenever a new defect comes out you have those people beating their chests bragging how they were too smart to get caught up with chasing those lines and their herd is free of those defects, well I say "bully" to them, I hope they get what they are looking for out of the genetics they are chasing. I have yet to see any of these genetic defects have any significant effect on the actual end user, the commercial cattle producer. Ken [/QUOTE]
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7 degrees of separation: The angus breed of the future?
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