NELORE
Sourced & Edited by: Greg Nolan, Feb.
2005
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The Nelore is
of the species Bos indicus (Zebu),
and has great dissimilarities to breeds of the Bos taurus (European)
species, like the Angus, Hereford, Charolais and others.
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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BREED BRIEF The Breed
Today - 2005
The Nelore is
the most populous Beef Breed in the world, numbering over 130 million in Brazil.
Origin
There has never existed in India a breed called Nelore. This name corresponds to a district of the old Presidency
of Madrás, now belonging to the new State
of Andra, by the Bengal Sea. 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.
Brazil has become the largest
breeder of Nelore, and from there the breed was
exported to Argentina, Paraguay, Venezuela, Central America, Mexico, United States and many other countries.
In all those places, the contribution of the Nelore was
remarkable, whether through purebred selection within the breed or through
crosses with local breeds, many times of European origin.
The Nelore was first acknowledged in
Brazil in 1868, when a ship on its way to England carrying two Ongoles stopped
in Salvador, Bahia, and the animals were there
sold. Ten years later, a breeder from Rio de Janeiro, named Manoel Ubelhart Lemgruber, bought another couple from the Hamburg Zoo in Germany. Then the Nelore breed expanded gradually, first in Rio de Janeiro and Bahia, then in Minas Gerais, having reached Uberaba in 1875.
The creation of the Nelore Herd Book
and the definition of the breed standards in Uberaba, 1938, was of great relevance in the formation of the Nelore. In 1960, 20 animals were imported, and in 1962, the
last and most relevant purchase of live animals from India authorized
by the Brazilian Government, 84 Ongoles were imported.
These became founders of important breeding lines like Karvadi, Taj Mahal, Godahvari; http://www.bar5.com/NElines.htm and
were decisive to the great expansion of the Brazilian herd in the last 30
years, going from 56 million in 1965 to 160 million in 1995, 100 million
of which are Nelore, to the now estimated 192 million
now in 2005, with the herd expected to expand to 220 million by 2010 .
Distinguishing Characteristics
It is said that there is no ideal breed, and that every breed
has strong points and none is better for all important economic traits, the Nelore is certainly the best alternative for economic beef
production in the tropics, which are responsible for 65% of the world’s
bovine population.
Hardiness. The main advantage
that the Nelore has over other breeds of beef cattle
is its hardiness. Calves are alert, with an active behavior, standing up
and suckling soon after they are born, without any need for constant human
intervention. The Nelore has notable physical strength
and is unexcelled in its ability to thrive under harsh climatic, nutritional
and sanitary conditions, frequent in the tropics. Because of their hardiness
and rustling ability, Nelore surpass all other
breeds under conditions of poor range and drought.
Heat and Insect Resistance. The Nelore has a loose skin with sweat glands that are twice
as big and 30% more numerous than those of the European breeds. The Nelore’s black skin, covered by a white or light gray
coat helps filtering and reflecting harmful sun rays. Its low level of metabolism
also contributes to heat resistance, as the Nelore feeds
less but often, generating less internal heat. Nelores possess
natural resistance to various insects, as its skin has a dense texture, making
it difficult for blood sucking insects to penetrate. Nelores also
have a well developed subcutaneous muscle layer which enables them to remove
insects simply by shaking their coat.
Metabolic Efficiency. The Nelore can efficiently convert poor quality forages into
beef, and withstand long periods without water. Due to their habit of feeding
lightly but frequently, Nelore and Nelore hybrid cattle are highly resistant to bloating, and
death losses rarely occur from this cause. Excellent feed conversion ratio
and good disposition allow the Nelore to be early
finished in feedlots, with highly positive results.
Meat Quality. While the beef of
some breeds have excessive marbling, or intra-muscular fat, beef from Nelore cattle have enough fat to be highly palatable. The Nelore matches the recent shift in the beef industry towards
a low calorie, leaner meat diet, without compromising taste. This was demonstrated
at the 1991 Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, when a purebred Nelore steer won the “Best Overall in Taste” contest,
competing against dozens of hybrid and European steers.
Reproductive Efficiency. Nelore have
long, deep bodies with clear underlines, keeping vulnerable parts out of
the way of infection. Cows have small udders and short teats, while bulls'
sheaths are also short. These characteristics contribute to the breed’s
reproductive efficiency. Nelore dams have a long
and prolific reproductive life, pronounced mothering ability, and plenty
of milk for their calves. The Nelore cows calve
very easily due to their greater frame, wide pelvic opening and larger birth
canal, which reduces the incidence of distocia.
Maternal Instinct and Disposition. Nelore dams
have highly developed maternal instinct throughout the whole milking period,
which is of great importance for extensive breeding systems. They lick their
newborn, put them to suckle and look for a safe place to hide them from predators.
The active and vivid disposition of the Nelore is
largely responsible for their unusual thriftiness, hardiness and adaptability
to a wide range of feed and climate. Nelore cows
are very protective of their young, and this can be confused with the normal Bos Indicus intelligence
that like affection and quickly respond to kind handling methods, becoming
extremely docile, in fact, test done in the US indicate that Brhman & the Indian breeds are highly intelligent & halter
break in one day.
Selection
A lot of genetic variation exists among all breeds, and the selection
within a breed is almost as important as the choice of the breed itself.
Generation after generation, during thousands of years favoring the survival
of the strongest and better prepared to withstand the intense heat, the lack
of forages, the prolonged dry season and the many diseases has shaped anatomically
and physiologically the ancestors of the modern Nelore with a common denominator: hardiness, fertility and
longevity.
Once in Brazil, this natural selection
base was then managed and redirected for beef production. The result was
encouraging. In a few decades, the Brazilian Nelore became
an impressive biotype in terms of uniformity, conformation and quality, still
preserving the attributes of hardiness and vivid disposition. Once the ethnic
purity was consolidated, the Brazilian Nelore breeders
have been selected for body size and muscular development, as well as skeletal
soundness.
Each and every registered Nelore sire
is the outcome of a complex process of selection. Breeders receive assistance
from a nationwide association, the Associação Brasileira dos Criadores de
Zebu or ABCZ. Birth weight, weaning weight, yearling weight, scrotal
circumference, are some of the traits measured. Research centers and universities
calculate EPDs (Expected Progeny Difference) through
complex mathematical models and powerful super-computers, making the results
available to breeders to support their selection decisions.
Genetics and Breeding
Today, the number of purebred registered Nelore is
above 5 million. The challenge faced by selection is to multiply the genetic
gains to a much larger population. To multiply the genetic potential of Nelore sires, Artificial Insemination is being used in large
scale since the 60’s. Sales of Nelore semen
represent 65% of the AI market of all beef breeds in Brazil. The leading Nelore sire there produced and sold 34,000 straws of semen
in 1995, followed by another Nelore that sold 30,000,
which means that both sires must have bred more than 20,000 cows.
Effort is also being made to multiply the genetic potential of Nelore dams through the use of embryo transfer. With more
than 50,000 embryos transferred per year, a great part of which are Nelore, Brazil is the 5th country
in the world, for this technology, after the United States, Canada, England and France. Work is also well
under way with frozen embryos, embryo splitting and In Vitro Fertilization
of Nelore.
The Polled Nelore
There is a worldwide tendency for the elimination of horns in
all cattle breeds through the use of naturally polled animals. The advent
of the Polled Nelore, some 50 years ago, has presented
the beef cattle industry with an option to avoid the mechanical removal of
horns, a common practice, especially in feedlots. This dehorning method is
expensive, time consuming and painful for the animal, causing stress and
weight loss, besides exposing the steers to various infections. If horns
were necessary for defense purpose in a wild environment, today a naturally
polled animal brings many advantages.
Management of polled herds is easy and friendly, as herds are
more homogeneous and it is possible to gather more animals at one time in
the corral or in a truck for transportation. The polled Nelore also
presents less injuries from fights, preserving their
coats for the leather industry. As a result of these advantages, the number
of genetically polled steers in commercial herds is rapidly increasing.
Since the polled type is genetically dominant over the horned
type, when a horned dam is bred to a polled sire or a polled dam is bred
by a horned sire, approximately 85-90% of the offspring will be genetically
polled. That is of great importance to the polled Nelore selection,
as breeders have access to both the polled and the horned Nelore genetic banks. It also allows breeders of the horned
type to easily start a polled herd simply by using a polled sire on their
dams.
Crossbreeding
There is a universal trend toward meat production through crossbreeding. Heterosis,
or hybrid vigor, is the biological phenomenon in which the performance of
the offspring is greater than the average of the parents. The more distantly
related the parents are, the greater is the hybrid vigor response in their progeny.
Classic scientists like Linneo and Darwin supported
the idea of Bos Indicus (Nelore)
and Bos Taurus (European) to be considered
separate species due to the differences they presented from the adaptation
to environments diametrically opposites in latitude. In beef cattle, maximum
hybrid vigor results from crossbreeding these two historically unrelated
species.
Hybrid vigor in beef cattle is expressed in heavier weaning weights,
increased milk production, greater calf vitality, higher fertility and increased
resistance to disease. In addition to increased weight for age and greater
carcass efficiency, the hybrid animal inherits to a great extent many economic
characteristics of its Nelore parent, such as drought
resistance, heat tolerance, disease resistance and increased longevity.
In a recent
research done by the U.S. Meat Animal Research Center in Nebraska, the Nelore F1s showed the largest percentage of unassisted
calving, the highest weaning percentage, and their offspring calves were
2nd in 200-day weaning weight of the 11 breeds evaluated. These results combined
placed the Nelore F1s as the most productive
dams, with an impressive 115.0 ratio.
In the United States a common spelling for the breed
is Nellore. When the Ongole breed was
first imported from Andhra Pradesh to Brazil it was called "Nellore" after the district
of origin. Soon the extra "L" was dropped since it is not necessary
in Portuguese. Several authors now give Nellore as a synonym of the Ongole breed
from India.
Nelore Breed Associations and Registries
Reference:
Correspondence, João Pedro Flecha De
Lima, Rua Prof. Alexandre Correa, 591
- 4 and. 05657-230 Sao Paulo, SP - BRAZIL E-mail: jpflecha@amhost.amcham.com.br
Joshi,
N.R., Phillips, R.W. (1953) Zebu Cattle of India and Pakistan, FAO Agriculture Studies No. 19, Publ. by FAO, Rome, 256 pp.
Mason,
I.L. World Dictionary of Livestock Breeds. Third Edition. C.A.B
International. 1988
Correspondence, I.L. Mason, Edinburgh, Scotland
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