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N'Dama

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
An N'Dama herd in West Africa

N'Dama is a breed of cattle from West Africa. Other names for them include Boenca or Boyenca (Guinea-Bissau), Fouta Jallon, Djallonké or Djallonké cattle, Fouta Longhorn, Fouta Malinke, Futa, Malinke, Mandingo (Liberia), and N'Dama Petite (Senegal). Originating in the Guinea highlands, they are also found in southern Senegal, Guinea-Bissau, the Gambia, Mali, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone. They are trypanotolerant, allowing them to be kept in tsetse fly-infested areas.[1][2] They also show superior resistance to ticks and the diseases they carry and to Haemonchus contortus stomach worms.[3]

The Senepol breed of beef cattle developed on the Caribbean Island of St. Croix was long thought to originate from crosses between N'Dama cattle, imported in the late 19th century, and Red Poll cattle, but it is actually an admixed breed between a European taurina (Red Poll) and zebu.

Reproduction

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The age of first calving is 3.5 years in Upper Casamance and is slightly lower in Lower and Middle Casamance. The calving interval is 16 to 17 months in Middle and Upper Casamance and roughly 19 months in Lower Casamance with 80% of calving taking place in the last six months of the year. The abortion rate is 10 to 20%, which leaves an average calving rate of 56%. Calves are weaned around 12 months and castration, when it occurs, is around three years. Annual mortality rate is 12% overall, with 30% for calves under one year, 15% for one to two-year-olds, 5% for two to three-year-olds, and 2% for adults.[4]

Trypanotolerance in N'Dama cattle

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Trypanosomiasis poses a considerable constraint on livestock agricultural development in Tsetse fly infested areas of sub Saharan Africa, especially in west and central Africa. International research conducted by ILRI in Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Kenya has shown that the N'Dama is the most resistant breed.[5][6] In Nigeria, research has shown that N'Dama is up to 2-3x (or 25%) more resistant than Nguni cattle. And F1 N'Dama x Nguni 16.5% better than pure Nguni.[7] While in Kenya research conducted by KALRO has shown a similarity with crossbreeding N'Dama x Boran cattle.[8][9][10]

References

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  1. ^ Charles G. Hickman, Cattle Genetic Resources Elsevier Health Sciences, 1991 ISBN 0-444-88638-9 p34
  2. ^ Oklahoma State University breed profile
  3. ^ FAO study; The state of agricultural biodiversity in the livestock sector p99
  4. ^ "Trypanotolerant livestock in West & Central Africa - Volume 2. Country studies". Archived from the original on 2018-12-25. Retrieved 2012-08-08.
  5. ^ "Trypanotolerant livestock in the context of trypanosomiasis intervention strategies". Fao.org. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  6. ^ Post (2012-01-09). "Animal genetic resources characterization and conservation research i…". Slideshare.net. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  7. ^ "500 - Internal server error". Archived from the original on 2020-07-22. Retrieved 2019-05-23.
  8. ^ "F2-generation of N'Dama x Boran cross | Download Scientific Diagram". 2004-06-11. Retrieved 2019-10-11.
  9. ^ USA (2019-05-06). "Trypanotolerance in N'Dama x Boran crosses under natural trypanosome challenge: effect of test-year environment, gender, and breed composition". BMC Genetics. 13. Ncbi.nlm.nih.gov: 87. doi:10.1186/1471-2156-13-87. PMC 3519672. PMID 23075408.
  10. ^ Waaij, E.H. van der; Hanotte, Olivier H.; Arendonk, Johan A.M. van; Kemp, Stephen J.; Kennedy, D.; Gibson, John P.; Teale, A.J. (2019-05-03). "Population parameters for traits defining trypanotolerance in an F2 cross of N'Dama and Boran cattle". Livestock Production Science. 84 (3): 219–230. doi:10.1016/S0301-6226(03)00078-2. hdl:10568/29175. Retrieved 2019-10-11.