knabe
Well-known member
Cow has pedigree holes. Doesn’t mean it’s maine anjou.
Bull looks maine anjou.
Bull looks maine anjou.
knabe said:Cow has pedigree holes. Doesn’t mean it’s maine anjou.
Bull looks maine anjou./// Lotta water under the bridge-as Far as Irish Sweeptakes-the fullblood could possibly be from his dam -according to several people who were there-one being related to his breeder O0
I don't think he is. The UK now requires all bull calves to be tested for myostatin before being registered. Australia now requires all imported bulls to be mystatin tested before registering them. I really don't understand why AI sires and herd bulls are not being tested by breeders. If a bull is tested it's a lot easier to make informed breeding decisions.aj said:I guess I assume that "hot Commodity" is a carrier of some sort of the myostatin deal.
librarian said:Here is the ad our beloved steerplanet is showing me because I have been searching diabetes, obesity and metabolism. The Myostatin mutation is addressing the same issue in cattle, I think.
A very straightforward review of the pros and cons of Myostatin mutations in beef productionlibrarian said:I have been reading a lot about Myostatin. When Myostatin is inhibited from regulating muscle growth, not only the number of muscle fibers continue to increase, but the type of muscle fibers that increase are the type II fast twitch fibers. Normally the muscle fibers in cattle are predominantly type I slow twitch fibers. Fast twitch and slow twitch muscles have different metabolic pathways for burning energy. Fast twitch fibers draw quick bursts of energy ( speed and strength) from circulating blood sugar and slow twitch muscles burn stored fat. Fastvtwitch muscles are bigger and stronger, but they fatigue quickly after blood sugar is exhausted. The animals pre slaughter and the meat, post slaughter, must be handled with care to prevent the muscle from becoming dark and tough. Before death the muscle may be more tender...but that can change with stress and temperature.
Fast twitch muscle is less insulin resistant than slow twitch because instead of sugar in the blood being stored as fat, it is burned for energy. Myostatin inhibition is being studied as a treatment for diabetes for this reason.
So, when I propose that Myostatin inhibition by the various mutation in cattle is an upstream response to recalibrate the metabolism to better survive downstream stress...at least there is logic to the idea. What is the fattening process other than lack of exercise and a high calorie diet? Cattle are evolved to walk, graze, rest and flee from predators occasionally. Most of the time they just walk and graze. Change the conditions of existence and nature might respond with variations in the dosage of the proteins that gene regulatory networks produce. Some are better, some worse. Heterozygosity is generally advantageous. So, I think the question is not whether a mutation is good or bad...profitable or not, but are these mutations advantageous under the conditions your cattle are living in? Beyond that, are the animals being handled in such a way that their muscles are not exhausted at the point of death and is the meat being handled appropriately to maintain tenderness?
http://www.esalq.usp.br/lepse/imgs/conteudo_thumb/Recasting-developmental-evolution-in-terms-of-genetic-pathway-and-network-evolution-------and-the-implications-for-comparative-biology-1.pdf
"Thus, while the concepts of pathway and network evo- lution outlined in this paper are neither particularly abstract nor difficult, they constitute a challenge to traditional think- ing and experimental analyses in both evolutionary and com- parative biology. Accordingly, their incorporation into the standard thinking of these fields might well proceed slowly."
aj said:So on Learjet......could he be a carrier on both sides?