larkota
New member
kolanuraven said:Hay Feeder said:Jumping ship is option
AAA should of taken care of these issues many years ago
No question the large breeders, money investors and registered cattle traders are trying to find something wrong with their competitors cattle
Now DNA / testing company's that can generate the associations more money than registrations and transfers ever have
I contacted a sales manger this summer about him marketing my cattle he told me I was not big enough for him
Is this new defect really a defect or something a lab dreamed up to generate more business
It always seems that someone with starched shirts in a office somewhere ( may of never raised cattle) find someway to manulape producers.
Those are also reasons for jumping ship !
It is a defect.....a recessive allele.. and it does exist and calves can be born with this, BUT IT IS RARE.........but it is just that RECESSIVE.
It has existed since bovines have existed as it had to come from somewhere, it just didn't ' happen' all of a sudden.
Much ado about nothing here. AAA needs to control their own information releases and not let some lab/testing firm do it for them as their motives are totally different.
mutation
A change in the structure of the genes or chromosomes of an organism. Mutations occurring in the reproductive cells, such as an egg or sperm, can be passed from one generation to the next. Most mutations occur in junk DNA and have no discernible effects on the survivability of an organism. Of the remaining mutations, the majority have harmful effects, while a minority can increase an organism's ability to survive. A mutation that benefits a species may evolve by means of natural selection into a trait shared by some or all members of the species