librarian
Well-known member
Did this bull carry double muscling? Does ASA have a genetic defect code for the myostatin mutations? Angus acknowledges two myostatin mutations and it hasn't hurt them.
librarian said:Did this bull carry double muscling? Does ASA have a genetic defect code for the myostatin mutations? Angus acknowledges two myostatin mutations and it hasn't hurt them.
You test by way of the Angus marker for Double muscling? Should we test all shorthorns or just certain blood lines?Okotoks said:I am pretty certain he didn't carry myostatin. He was imported by my sister and brother in law and shows up multiple times in many pedigrees, 40 to 60 times in some cases and I don't know of a double muscled issue. I did have Super Flag tested for TH and PH and his is free of both of those. We test all our herd bulls for myostatin now and are currently pulling hair to test this years bull calves. We have tested some already. I am attaching a photo of a white bull calf out of a two year old Mandalong Super Flag heifer. He is myostatin free (by Diamond Lord Belmore 56B). She raised two calves this year an orphan blue steer and her own! Her calf weighed 577 at 186 days and she was 1029lbs. so 57% of her body weight and the blue steer weighed 543 lbs! That's all on grass no creep feed.
I actually took a trip of a lifetime and went to Australia to look at the genetics I am most interested in. During that trip I got very ill and it turned out I was pregnant and have been one of the lucky women to have hypermesis gravidarum. Now at 6.5 months along I am starting to feel human again and tada I am back!Duncraggan said:jaimiediamond, I thought you had been banished to the Canadian internet wilderness, welcome back, been a long time since I saw a post!
Willow Springs said:Big Mac was collected, I actually have one straw, and Duane Farrar or Milt Hennig might have some. I know another fellow who has a few straws.
Eionmor Ideal 69F ?huntaway said:I have had a couple show up in the past 5 or 6 years that I would be confident they had it but I did not test just culled.
How does the gene work, is it a recessive like TH or DS where it doesn't always show the phenotype?
Mine have contained Both Belmore Jackaroo and Eionmoor Ideal close in the pedigree and are now A bit careful what I put over Jackaroo daughters.
Okotoks or Jaimie have you tested the wentworth bull you used?
sue said:Eionmor Ideal 69F ?huntaway said:I have had a couple show up in the past 5 or 6 years that I would be confident they had it but I did not test just culled.
How does the gene work, is it a recessive like TH or DS where it doesn't always show the phenotype?
Mine have contained Both Belmore Jackaroo and Eionmoor Ideal close in the pedigree and are now A bit careful what I put over Jackaroo daughters.
Okotoks or Jaimie have you tested the wentworth bull you used?
librarian said:Maybe it's easier to find semen on 69F and he could be tested?
Huntaway, it's believed to be a simple recessive, but there is a wide range of expression in heterozygous animals. As mentioned, there are 9 known variants distributed across several breeds. Here's a good description of the variants. https://tlbiolabs.co.uk/products/bovine/myostatin