breeds of cattle. beef breeds common beef breeds: hereford angus shorthorn south devon
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Breeds of Cattle

Beef Breeds
Common Beef Breeds:
HerefordAngusShorthornSouth Devon


Hereford White face red coat Very hardy Polled High quality meat
with marbling Excellent mothering Docile Highly fertile and
calve easily

Angus
Solid black colour Naturally polled Hardy,
undemanding, and adaptable
Mature in 2 years High carcase yield Marbling Calve easily and
good mothers

Shorthorn Long to medium
horns Have been farmed for
both meat and milk Medium size Docile and easy to
handle Good calving and
mothering Meat is lean but
marbled good flavour Crossed with other
breeds

South Devon
Docile and easy to handle
Used for crossing with other breeds
Highly fertile, easy calving, and good mothering
Adapts to temperature extremes
Good at converting grass to meat

Exotic Breeds
Limousin Charolais Simmental Saler Belgian Blue

Limousin
Medium sized and well muscled
Golden brown coat Mature early High quality carcase
and high meat to bone ratio
Polled Efficient feed
converters

Charolais
Colour varies from white to light straw
Docile which allows for high feed conversion rates
Large size, heavily muscled
Lean meat give high dressing out percentages
Companies pay a premium
Tolerates heat well

Simmental
Red and white spotted or gold and white.
White face Horned Easy to handle, hardy High and long term
fertility. Bulls common as
terminal sires often mated with Hereford and Angus
Good mothering and milk yield
Fast growing can mature in 12 months
Excellent converters of grass to meat

Saler
Black and polled Excellent foragers on
rough pastures and hay in winter
Thick coat in winter makes them hardy
Strong legs and feet can hadle rough ground without feet problems
Excellent mothers and calving

Belgian Blue Used as terminal
sires for passing on double muscle gene
Very lean meat with high meat to bone ratio.

Terms used in Breeding Terminal sire – male used in
breeding for meat breeds Maternal cattle – cows used
for producing dairy breeds Bull – adult male Calf – young cattle not
weaned Heifer – female cow not
mated Steer – castrated male Bullock – same as steer Bobby calf – male or female
calves reared for meat
Store cattle – young stock not yet fattened
Freemartin – twins born with defects that make them infertile
Springing cow – pregnant cow about to give birth
Teaser bull – neutered bull but can still mate
Nurse cow – used for rearing calves
Dry cow – cow not producing milk

Steers and Bulls
Not castrated – for breeding Castrated to make more docile and put on weight on hind quarters