cow chaser
Member
So far, I haven't found any info on the web and my vet has no idea either. Cattle are my uncles, but affected calves are sired by my bulls, so I would really like to figure this one out.
The Problem: Showed up about the beginning of Sept on March and April born calves. Almost like the backbone has sunken clear down in the shoulders, shoulder blades raise significantly on each side as the calves walk, maybe 5" above the backbone on the worse calf. Almost looks like the muscles are sliding down into the armpit area. Otherwise the calves seem healthy. Pictures are of the worse calf.
Here's the why I can't pin it down as anything. Calves are sired by full brother grandsons of Emblazon, no calves from other sires in the herd seem to be affected. That leads me to think that it is a genetic defect. But.....Probably only 20% of calves sired by these two bulls have been affected. I bought some cows from him that had calves from these sires and none of them show any symptoms. There is 4 other full brothers in three different herds and none of their calves have shown any symptoms.
My uncle has fed no salt or mineral since they went to grass in May, before that I'm not sure.
My conclusion has been that something they lack for mineral nutrition is affecting a weakness in the genetic makeup of the calves. I had thought something to do with White Muscle Disease, but we are in an area that generally has high Selenium.
Any ideas?[/url]
The Problem: Showed up about the beginning of Sept on March and April born calves. Almost like the backbone has sunken clear down in the shoulders, shoulder blades raise significantly on each side as the calves walk, maybe 5" above the backbone on the worse calf. Almost looks like the muscles are sliding down into the armpit area. Otherwise the calves seem healthy. Pictures are of the worse calf.
Here's the why I can't pin it down as anything. Calves are sired by full brother grandsons of Emblazon, no calves from other sires in the herd seem to be affected. That leads me to think that it is a genetic defect. But.....Probably only 20% of calves sired by these two bulls have been affected. I bought some cows from him that had calves from these sires and none of them show any symptoms. There is 4 other full brothers in three different herds and none of their calves have shown any symptoms.
My uncle has fed no salt or mineral since they went to grass in May, before that I'm not sure.
My conclusion has been that something they lack for mineral nutrition is affecting a weakness in the genetic makeup of the calves. I had thought something to do with White Muscle Disease, but we are in an area that generally has high Selenium.



Any ideas?[/url]