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Fastest Growing Breed Cross?
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<blockquote data-quote="Caustic Burno" data-source="post: 1472792" data-attributes="member: 694"><p>This review highlights the accomplishments of three University of Florida beef cattle research locations from the 1940s through the late 1980s. These locations produced estimates of breed effects and heterosis for a variety of traits in Brahman and a number of other breeds. Most importantly, these facilities investigated the crossbred superiority (heterosis retained or expressed) in several crossbreeding systems, including terminal crosses, two and three breed rotations, and inter se matings (including F-1 and 3/8-5/8 parents). Results generally supported the dominance model of heterosis expression for most reproductive and calf growth traits.</p><p><a href="https://www.brahman.org/PDFs/Florida-Crossbreeding-Research.pdf" target="_blank">https://www.brahman.org/PDFs/Florida-Cr ... search.pdf</a></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Caustic Burno, post: 1472792, member: 694"] This review highlights the accomplishments of three University of Florida beef cattle research locations from the 1940s through the late 1980s. These locations produced estimates of breed effects and heterosis for a variety of traits in Brahman and a number of other breeds. Most importantly, these facilities investigated the crossbred superiority (heterosis retained or expressed) in several crossbreeding systems, including terminal crosses, two and three breed rotations, and inter se matings (including F-1 and 3/8-5/8 parents). Results generally supported the dominance model of heterosis expression for most reproductive and calf growth traits. [url=https://www.brahman.org/PDFs/Florida-Crossbreeding-Research.pdf]https://www.brahman.org/PDFs/Florida-Cr ... search.pdf[/url] [/QUOTE]
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