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Cattle with Similar Markings Across the World - Note the Antiquity of
these breeds in their various geographic regions.
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(1)
SOURCE:
Oklahoma
State University - Breeds of Livestock |
Marchigiana (mar-key-jah-nah)(1)
Other Names:
Del Cubante (Avellino).
The Marchigiana breed originated in the Marche and surrounding
provinces of
Italy near Rome. This area is typified by rough terrain and the
available feed is often less than ideal. The breed now makes up about
45% of Italy's total cattle population. The
Marchigiana breed is widespread throughout the Marches, Labium, Abruzzo
and Campania areas of Italy.
There seems to be considerable differences in opinion as to the exact
origin of the breed. According to The Meaty Marchigiana, a
leaflet published by the American International Marchigiana Society,
they were
brought into the area by the
Barbarians after the fall of Rome in the
fifth century. Anther version, put forth by
Dr. Briggs in Modern Breeds of Livestock, is that it is a
relatively new breed, being differentiated as late as 1933 and known
locally at the time as the Improved Marche.
The Marchigiana hair coat is white. Calves
are fawn or wheat colored at birth and will turn white at 3 to 4 months.
They have pronounced black skin pigmentation. The tongue, muzzle, and
orifices are black. The switch of the tail and area around the eyes has
dark, almost black, hair. The
medium-sized horns are black at the tip, white in the middle, and
have a yellowish cast at the base and usually curve forward in bulls and
upward in females. Due to the introduction of the poll gene from
foundation females used in grading up, percentage cattle are often
selected for the polled trait in the United States.
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Nguni
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The breed from the past for the future
Nguni cattle are a sub-type of the African Sanga cattle associated with
the pastrolist cattle culture of the Negro/Bantu people of Africa.
Protein analyses indicate that they have characteristics of both Bos
Taurus and Bos Indicus cattle.
Physiologically they have characteristics that place them apart from
both types. What is certain is that they have been shaped by natural
selection in the African environment for thousands of years.
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Galloway
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Historian's writings differ somewhat, but upon three points they
generally agree regarding the origin of the Galloway. The breed is
recognized to be a very ancient one, with obscure origins shrouded in
antiquity and its' name derived from the word Gallovid or Gaul.
Characteristics
The most visible characteristic of the Galloway is their long hair
coat. Serving a dual purpose, the coarse outer coat sheds wind and rain,
while the soft, fur-like under coat provides insulation and
waterproofing. The color of the coat ranges from the more popular Black,
to Dun (silver through brown), Red, White (with
dark pigment about the eyes, nose, ears and teats), and the
Belted (black, dun or red, with a white band around the middle).
It is said that the Galloway breed was never crossed with the other
breeds. It is not known where the polled character was acquired by the
Galloway breed because in its beginning many of the cattle were horned.
However, many writers during the last part of the 1700s and early 1800s
mentioned polled Galloway cattle, and the breeders decided they liked
the polled characteristic and started selecting their cattle for the
character. Most of the early cattle in the Galloway district were black,
but red, brown, brindles, and cattle with white markings were not
uncommon.
ALSO SEE: WHITE
GALLOWAY for amazing photos.
"Galloway cattle are generally very docile,"
quotes William Youatt, (English researcher, scientist, veterinary
surgeon, historian & standard writer on cattle in the early 1800s.) He
goes on to say, "This is a most valuable point about them in every
respect. It is rare to find even a bull furious or troublesome."
Galloways are very courageous however, and if annoyed by dogs or wild
animals, they will act in concert, by forming a crescent and jointly
attacking.
William McCombie, (pioneer Scottish Angus & Shorthorn breeder) said,
"The Galloway undoubtedly has many great qualifications. On poor land
they are unrivaled, on land so poor our Aberdeens could not subsist upon
it. There is no other breed worth more by the pound weight than a
first-class Galloway."
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Nelore (1)
It was in Brazil that some authors started to use the name Nellore as a
synonym to
Ongole, the Indian breed that contributed most to the creation of the
Nelore.The history of the
Ongole dates back 2,000 years before Christian times. It was the Aryan
people that brought the ancestors of the Nelore to India, where they
were submitted to extreme weather conditions. The arid lands of
Belushistan, the cold winters of Punjab, the alluvial lands of Ganges
and the torrid lands by the Bengal sea provided the
Ongole breed with the adaptation genes that are now favorably
expressed in the modern Nelore.
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Fjall(Fjällras)
(1)
Also
known by: Swedish Mountain, Fjällras, Swedish Highland
The Fjall is polled and of typical dairy type, its considered a very good
grazing animal and an efficient milk producer. The color varies from nearly
totally white, to white with spots of black or red, over to colour-sided
black or red with white top and bottom line. Sometimes even single colored
black or red animals occur. More seldom can gray color be seen.

The Fjall is closely related with the Norwegian breed " Sidet tronderfe/nordlandsfe"
or "STN
See Also:
Swedish Mountain Cattle (Fjällras)
for additional photos and detailed information.
Breed Society: Svensk Fjällrasavel,
Larstorp, S-590 30 Borensberg, Sweden
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Blanco Orejinegro (1)
Also Known As: Antioquia, Bon, BON
They are white with black points. The coloration of the breed has lead to
speculation as to its ancestory with possible connections to Wild White,
Swedish Mountain, Trondheim, Mauritius or White Italian cattle considered
possible. A more likely origin is that the breed was simply selected for the
color pattern over a period of time.
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Channi (1)
The
Channi is one of the premium draft breeds of Pakistan and India.
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Cholistani (1)
The Cholistani is a multi-purpose breed, being used for both meat and
milk and as a draft animal. They are Zebu or Bos indicus cattle
and are found in the Cholistan desert in Bahawalpur, Pakistan.
Cholistani are usually speckled red, brown or black. They are of recent
origin and are thought to have been derived from the crossing of
Sahiwal with the local cattle.
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Dhanni (1)
The Dhanni is a draft type that is found in Attock,
Rawalpindi and Jhelum districts in Punjab Province of Pakistan. The coloring
in the majority of Dhanni cattle consists of black or red/brown spots on a
white coat. The average weight at maturity is 400 kg for males and 300 kg
for female
s.

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Vestland Fjord (1)
Also
Known By: Vestlandsk fjordfe, Fjord, West Coast Fjord, Westland
Horned, Western fjord cattle
This is a non-commercial rare breed with a registered population of 100
heifer (2 years and younger) and 214 cows as of January 1995.

The Vestland Fjord can be horned or polled, multi-coloured dual purpose
cow that is common to the fjord area of Western Norway. It is
short-legged and small-boned. It is the smallest of the native Norwegian
breeds. It is a relatively efficient milk yielder for its size,
producing approximately 4000 kg a year on a high roughage diet. Live
weight is approximately 400 kg. Semen reserves in 1995 was 15,331 units
(20 bulls).
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CANADIAN SPECKLE
PARK
The Speckle Park is a relatively new composite breed
whose origins in the 1950's are not wholly known. But for certain a
polled White Park (British White) was key to the Foundation animals
established. Most recently the history of the breed reflects
speculation that a Teeswater Shorthorn female sired by a polled White Park
bull was the foundation maternal line of the breed. Black Angus bulls
were used in the development of the breed known today as Speckle Park.
The various color patterns seen in this breed are identical to those found
in the polled and horned White Park herds of today, but on a much more
limited basis as British White and White Park breeders discourage continued
breeding for 'overmarked' seedstock.
" . . .
Mary Lindsay had spotted a red roan heifer in her fathers herd a few years
before and because she was interested in unusual colors she bought the
heifer. Regardless of the herd sire she bred the cow to it always produced
calves with that color pattern. It is believed that the heifer was a
descendent of a Teeswater Shorthorn which had been bred to a White Park
bull.

The Lamonts crossed their speckled cows with Black Angus bulls . The
resulting offspring came in a variety of color patterns, some white with
black points, some leopard colored and some black sided with speckled hips,
white top and underline and roan faces. The Lamonts grew very interested and
decided to attempt to develop a new breed. . . "
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