novaman":1fjy5rw6 said:
I have heard that there are cases where a cow conceives twins but loses one sometime early on. If it were a heifer/bull twinning the heifer is likely sterile with no evidence of a twin at birth. I doubt it would happen 3 times in the same year but just something interesting I heard. I don't even know if it's true.
I have also heard of this happening, but I thought 3 out of 31 was a bit unlikely. Perhaps it is the most likely reason though.
regolith":1fjy5rw6 said:
Rodderz; I've heard my grazier give me the same story (about another line of heifers). Five were empty (I presume about 10%) and all were identified at PD as freemartins.
I take that information with a pretty big pinch of salt, myself. The vets aren't perfect. Uteri have been known to do vanishing acts, and sometimes cows have been identified MT and calved within a few months.
I've had one freemartin I didn't know about; and I was able to identify how the mix-up might have happened though one thing I'm sure of is that her bull twin was a different breed (several cows nine months previous were exposed to both the Angus bull and Jersey AI).
What nova says is the reason I've often heard also. Whether it would happen three times without precedent... what was your feed situation the previous autumn? Just a thought.
Welcome to the boards.
This is a very valid point. I'm sure a lot of graziers tell a few untruths to cover their butts. In this case however, the animals were grazed on our own property and I was present at the pregnancy test. The vet is very old school and thoroughly reliable, so I would tend to believe him.
My father also farms in the same area and runs a similar system. The young stock from both farms are grazed together on the same property. In a normal year, from my 30-odd heifers and his 40-odd, we would expect 1 or at the most 2 MT's. So this year I had no conventional empties but three Freemartins. My Dad had 1 empty and also 1 Freemartin! Dad has been farming for over 30 years and can't remember having one before. I don't believe too much in coincidence so I was a bit concerned that there may be another disease or condition that causes the same mutation.
Thanks for the replies folks. Maybe I will get a lotto ticket :lol: