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Value of Selecting Bulls for High Potential Fertility
By David W. Forrest, professor, Texas A&M
University

Among bulls of
satisfactory breeding potential, there are other reproductive factors to
consider that may give you a higher percentage of females bred early in
the breeding season.
The first test, which has
been used by veterinarians for decades to classify satisfactory or
unsatisfactory potential breeders, is the breeding soundness exam (BSE).
This exam assesses the external characteristics of the bull, the
internal organs of the reproductive tract and the semen quality.
The external exam ensures
structural soundness, vision and physical health are adequate for the
bull to efficiently detect females in heat.
Scrotal circumference is
an important indication of capacity for sperm production. The
recommended minimum acceptable scrotal circumference is 34 centimeters
for bulls older than 24 months.
Reproductive system
soundness can be assessed by internal (accessory sex glands and inguinal
rings) and external (testicular symmetry and consistency, penis, prepuce
and epididymides) evaluation.
Ejaculate is evaluated to
determine percentage of progressively motile sperm; percentage of
morphologically normal sperm; and whether cells other than sperm (such
as leukocytes or red blood cells) are present.
At least 30 percent of
sperm must exhibit progressive forward motility and at least 70 percent
of sperm must exhibit normal morphology (shape of sperm head and tail)
for the bull to be classified as a satisfactory potential breeder.
Have your veterinarian
conduct BSEs each year, at least 60 days prior to the breeding season.
This will allow time to re-test any bulls or to get a replacement bull
before the start of the breeding season.
More than satisfactory
Serving capacity is another test for satisfactory potential breeders.
Bulls with moderate to high serving capacity can impregnate more cows at
first heat and achieve higher overall pregnancy rates than bulls of low
serving capacity.
Bulls classified as
satisfactory potential breeders were evaluated for serving capacity
(number of services achieved when exposed to females in heat during a
defined time period) in South Texas.
High (HSC) or low serving
capacity (LSC) bulls were placed in single-sire pastures with 50 cycling
heifers for 60 days. HSC bulls achieved higher average pregnancy rates
during the first 25 days of breeding (62 percent) than did the LSC bulls
(45 percent). At the end of the breeding season, HSC bulls produced 83
percent pregnancy rates. The low serving capacity bulls produced 67
percent pregnancy rates at the end of the breeding season.
The HSC bulls also
generated more pounds of calf weaned per female because there were more
older and heavier calves at weaning. There was a projected economic
advantage of more than $50 per female exposed to a HSC bull.
Social rank
Studies conducted in multi-sire herds under range conditions in
Australia identified a positive relationship between social dominance
rank of bulls and number of calves sired. The number of calves sired by
individual bulls was highly variable among bulls, but was repeatable
between years within individual bulls.
Their results also
indicated that stretching the ratio of bulls to females from 1:27 up to
1:36 did not delay conception or affect overall pregnancy rate. The
decreased ratio of bulls to females to an average of 1:36 can increase
the potential value of each bull by approximately $400 and increase the
longevity of bulls due to fewer injuries.
In 2002, a southwest Texas
herd was studied to measure the influence of physical and behavioral
traits on the number of calves sired per bull.
Twelve bulls of two
breeds, aged 18 to 24 months, were placed with 305 crossbred cows under
range conditions for a 90-day breeding season.
The final pregnancy rate
was 91.5 percent. Sires of 94.4 percent of the weaned calves were
determined by DNA typing.
The number of calves sired
by each of the 12 bulls ranged from none to 38, with an average of 21
calves per bull.
The percentages of motile
and normal sperm, social dominance and breed of bull accounted for 75
percent of the variation in the number of calves sired per bull. More
calves were born during the first 40 days of the calving season when
cows were exposed to bulls that produced ejaculates with greater than 80
percent normal sperm than for bulls whose ejaculates contained 80
percent or less normal sperm.
Helpful proteins
Several proteins have been identified in bovine semen that are
associated with fertility. Heparin-binding proteins (HBP) are produced
by the accessory sex glands and can promote capacitation of bovine sperm
in the female reproductive tract (necessary for sperm to acquire the
ability to fertilize the egg).
Bulls with high fertility
have been shown to have a specific form of HBP attached to their sperm
that is not present in bulls with lower fertility. Average pregnancy
rates were 17 percent higher for cows exposed to bulls that possessed
the desirable HBP fraction on sperm than for cows exposed to bulls which
lacked the HBP fraction.
This HBP fraction is
described as the fertility-associated antigen (FAA). Bulls that were
classified as both FAA-positive and high serving capacity stock
impregnated more cows in multi-sire herds during the first 20 days and
by day 60 of the breeding season than bulls that were either
FAA-negative or low serving capacity.
A chute-side cassette has
been commercially available since 2004 to classify an ejaculate as
either FAA-positive or FAA-negative.
An annual BSE of each bull
is fundamental to enhance pregnancy rate of the herd. Selecting bulls
that produce FAA-positive semen, containing more than 80 percent normal
sperm and are high serving capacity, should increase the number of
females that conceive early in the breeding season. In multi-sire
pastures, grouping bulls of similar age and dominance rank may reduce
bull attrition due to injury.
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