Whitebred Shorthorn Semen exported to the USA
by Jennifer
MacKenzie
Ranchers in the US who are being forced to re-evaluate
the economics of their beef production systems are looking
to one of the UK’s oldest breeds, the Whitebred
Shorthorn, for help.
In what could prove to be the saviour for the breed,
semen has been exported to the US to cross with breeding
females - and embryos are likely to follow later this
year.
Higher oil and grain prices in the US are forcing producers
to re-consider the type of cattle they are rearing and
go back to basics with cattle that can process forages
cheaply and efficiently.
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| Whitebred Shorthorn cow and calf
on the Roman Wall at Hotbank Farm, near Bardon Mill |
Spearheading the move is Keith Nafziger, a commercial
airline pilot who raises grass-fed, heritage breeds of
cattle and sheep on a small farm near Hillsboro, Oregon.
“Our beef program in the US has developed the last
fifty years around the concept of cheap, subsidized,
government corn. So the push has been on to develop a
beef animal that had a very large frame for butchering
efficiency and could survive and finish quickly in a
concrete feed yard,” said Mr Nafziger.
“Beef production costs have been increasing exponentially
due to higher oil and grain prices. Ranchers in the States
are being forced to reevaluate every dollar they spend.
The movement is a foot to return to the old ways.
“The problem is that our modified genetics in the
States that worked very well in the feedlot system are
no longer able to go back to forages and do what they
were originally designed to do. We can either spend years
trying to fix our genetics through breeding or we can
find animals that are the same as they ever were.”
With 220 breeding females across 31 pure bred herds in
the UK, the Whitebred Shorthorn has moved from the Rare
Breed Survival Trust's Critical species list to its Endangered
category.
Traditionally, the Whitebred Shorthorn has been bred
to produce bulls to cross with the Galloway cow to produce
hardy Blue Grey calves.
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| Society Chairman Adrian Wheelwright |
Native British breeds are becoming increasingly popular
because of the quality of their meat, their ease of management
and in the UK their suitability for environmental schemes.
“We’re hoping that we can persuade people
that this breed has a bright future but we desperately
need more breeders - 31 is too few - and the breed is
worth much more than that,” said Whitebred Shorthorn
Association chairman Adrian Wheelwright.
“It does a wonderful job on other breeds such as
the Galloway to produce the Blue Grey but we don’t
just have one market to fill. The breed needs bringing
out of the locker.
“Sales of Blue Greys did well last autumn because
of increased interest in traditional cattle but we need
to widen the use of the Whitebred Shorthorn which produces
a great cross with Highland, Aberdeen Angus, Welsh Black,
Simmental as well as Holsteins and Ayrshires.”
After a worldwide search it was decided that the Whitebred
Shorthorn fitted every parameter the US breeders were
searching for.
Mr Nafziger said the cattle’ s moderately sized
frame was very important for efficiently finishing on
a forage only diet.
Their white colour with a double hair coat in the winter
make them temperature tolerant from the Texas summer
heat of 40 degrees Celsius to the Montana winter cold
that can reach -40 degrees.
“This breed has only been exposed to grass and
forbs not grain. The Whitebred Shorthorn is a non-selective
grazer and will eat plants that other beef breeds will
not. They are an early maturing, easy finishing and high-quality
milk producing breed. The last trait mentioned above
being desperately important to producing high quality
grass fed and finished beef,” said Mr Nafziger.
He plans to breed all his multiple UK breeds with the
semen and is anxious to see how each one performs with
this cross.
The semen is up for sale to any producer who wants to
establish heterosis via the out cross in their herd.
“We hope to land some embryos this year and to
establish a purebred herd that will serve as a dual purpose
animal producing high quality grass fed milk for cheese
making and beef finishing. We also hope to be able to
establish enough genetic lines here in the States that
we have a self sustaining base. We envision eventually
selling cows and bulls to grass only producers all over
the United States.
“The American market has developed a taste for
grass fed beef, milk and cheese. The existing producers
are having a hard time keeping up with demand. The Whitebred
Shorthorn should be an invaluable addition to this retooling
of the American beef and dairy industry,” he added.
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