hamburgman said:
Ok, I should have clarified that xbreds I was talking about would be fairly fixed in their makeup also. There are plenty of people breeding their own sim angus cows to sim angus bulls and getting great results. If you want consistency don't breed your frame score 4 cow to a frame score 7 bull, most likely that progeny won't be consistent, same would hold for a purebred though.
Wouldn't a crossbred bull also pass on hybrid vigor, because 50% of the calf's genetic makeup would be from two different breeds? While not maximizing heterosis (which is nearly impossible in the real world) you would still definitely achieve it. Also they hybrids have longer useful lives, produce more and better sperm and settle more cows, so that seems to be a nice benefit.
Do you have any statistical data to support that hybrids settle significantly more cows? The numbers I found were in the decimals of percentages.
A crossbred female is statistically more fertile than purebred cows and this is significantly different from males due to her anatomy being significantly different from males. Females have 1 egg (1 chance), males have thousands and thousands of sperm (thousand and thousands of chances). A group of females expressing 5% increase in fertility is a big thing. If a bull has been evaluated and appropriately producing quality semen, the difference between several thousand sperm, and several thousand sperm + another few hundred or thousand won't really result in more females pregnant.
You may have a higher percentage of bulls in any given group considered to meet the criteria of being "fertile", but this is different than saying once you choose a specific "fertile" bull he will get x number of more cows pregnant in each cycle.
This has been discussed on here before, but yes cross bred cattle x cross bred cattle can result in hybrid vigor. But the degree you get will be maximized in a 3 way cross as well as maximize your consistency.
I'm not sure how you can find 2 different breeds of cattle that look so similar that a resulting cross will look like both parents. If you do find that, I think you have already lost some significant heterosis. I bet if you look far enough back, you will find common ancestors.
And yes, you can breed crossbred x crossbred and maintain some heterosis and may only be a little lower than F1 crosses. But those F1 crosses will be more consistent across the board.
Can someone benefit from a hybrid bull- Sure, there are many people that like the idea of simangus, or balancers to decrease the amount of exotic influence but still get a little heterosis and growth.
But lets be careful to not make it out to be more than it really it is. If you want consistency, a purebred (especially linebred) bull will give you the most.