Publications by authors named "Hohenboken W"

Animal breeding reports in the Journal of Animal Science (JAS) and in its predecessor, Proceedings of the American Society of Animal Production, were counted and categorized. In 22 volumes of the Proceedings of the American Society of Animal Production, 155 articles had animal breeding content, of which 54% were research reports, 17% extension communications, and 28% syntheses or reviews. Several of the latter featured advice from the livestock industry to the scientific community.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Our objective was to examine whether mouse lines divergently selected for response to fescue toxicosis differed in the impact of increasing reproductive intensity on growth, final weight or first and second parity reproduction. Resistant (R) and susceptible (S) females were never mated (NR), mated only once (low reproduction, LR), mated after their first litter was weaned (moderate reproduction, MR) or paired continuously with a male (high reproduction, HR), allowing concurrent pregnancy and lactation. Final weight was significantly higher in mated than in not mated females (31.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Facial eczema (FE) is a costly problem to New Zealand pastoral agriculture, and has a detrimental impact on animal wellbeing. Incidence and severity of the disease can be reduced by grazing management and zinc prophylaxis. An additional strategy is to breed animals that are genetically resistant to intoxication with sporidesmin, the causative mycotoxin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Our objective was to determine whether consumption of endophyte-infected fescue seed affected male reproduction differently in a mouse line previously selected for susceptibility (S) to fescue toxicosis than in a line previously selected for fescue toxicosis resistance (R). For 8 weeks following weaning, 48 males per line were provided diets containing 50% of either endophyte-infected (E+) or endophyte-free (E-) fescue seed. Each male was then paired with a female for 1 week, with litter size and weight recorded from subsequent births.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In previous work, a mouse line selected for resistance (R) to fescue toxicosis had higher activities of two hepatic Phase II detoxification enzymes than a mouse line selected for fescue toxicosis susceptibility (S). The primary objective of the present study was to determine whether those same lines also differed in hepatic Phase I enzyme activity, estimated from sleep time (ST) following sodium pentobarbital anesthesia. Additional objectives were to determine whether ST differences between lines were modulated by endophyte-infected fescue in the diet (with or without an enzyme inducer) and whether ST of individual mice was correlated with the effect of a toxin-containing diet on the postweaning growth of those mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

For eight generations, mouse lines were selected for smaller or larger reduction in postweaning gain from endophyte-infected fescue seed in the diet. After five generations in which there was no further selection for divergence in response to fescue toxicosis, the current experiment was conducted to determine whether resistant (R) and susceptible (S) lines differed in response to the mycotoxin sporidesmin (SPD). At approximately 8 wk of age, R and S mice that had never consumed endophyte-infected fescue seed were randomly assigned (five to seven per line x sex x SPD dose subclass) to receive dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) carrier or 10, 20, 30, or 40 mg/kg SPD by oral gavage.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In previous work, mouse lines were selected for eight generations for resistance (R) or susceptibility (S) to endophyte-infected fescue toxicosis using depression in postweaning gain caused by a toxin-containing diet as the selection criterion. Characterizing biological changes associated with resistance or susceptibility in those mice might suggest genetic or therapeutic approaches to alleviate fescue toxicosis in cattle. The first objective of the current experiment was to determine whether the toxin-containing diet depressed reproduction and mature size more severely in S than in R mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sexed semen will contribute to increased profitability of dairy and beef cattle production in a variety of ways. It could be used to produce offspring of the desired sex from a particular mating to take advantage of differences in value of males and females for specific marketing purposes. Commercial dairy farmers, those who produce and market milk, could use sexed semen to produce replacement daughters from genetically superior cows and beef crossbred sons from the remainder of their cow population.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study was conducted to determine whether inbreeding coefficients of selected parents or of progeny differed between lines of mice selected for increased or decreased responsiveness to a nutritional toxicosis. A second objective was to determine whether the influence of inbreeding of parents and/or progeny on reproductive traits differed between those lines. Mice were selected divergently for 8 generations for the effect on post-weaning growth of endophyte-infected fescue seed in their diet.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In three experiments, mice from lines selected for resistance (R) or susceptibility (S) to growth depression from endophyte-infected fescue seed in the diet were fed diets containing infected (E+) or non-infected (E-) seed. Activities of liver enzymes known to participate in oxidation, reduction, or hydrolysis or in conjugation of xenobiotics were measured in these mice. In all experiments, E+ caused greater reduction in initial ADG of S than of R mice.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Variation in response to fescue toxicosis was examined in inbred and linecross mice. In Exp. 1, exposure to a 50% endophyte-infected tall fescue diet (E+) reduced ADG of males from six inbred lines, but ADG of males from one line was modestly higher on E+.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fifteen progeny of two Polled Hereford sires were fed endophyte-infected tall fescue seed (E+) to investigate variability in susceptibility to fescue toxicosis. One sire, bred in Missouri, was reputed to produce calves that were resistant to fescue toxicosis. The Control sire, from Virginia, had unknown merit for susceptibility.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Blood selenium concentration at birth and growth from birth through finishing were analyzed on progeny from two birth years of Angus bulls of United States (US) or New Zealand (NZ) origin. Dams of the calves were Polled Hereford x Angus crossbreds whose sires had been selected divergently from the national sire summary to be superior (+) or inferior (-) for yearling weight EPD (G) and for total maternal effects (M) on weaning weight. There was no evidence of differences attributable to calf paternity or dam genetic group in concentration of blood selenium in calves at birth.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The objectives of this study were to quantify the relationships between traits observed before the first breeding season and fertility of 946 Angus and 351 Simmental heifers and to use those traits to develop prediction equations for heifer fertility. Logistic regression methodology was used. Traits investigated were Julian birth date, age of the heifer's dam, birth weight, actual weaning and yearling weights, weaning and yearling weight ratios, 205-d weight, 365-d weight, and birth-weaning, weaning-yearling, and birth-yearling ADG and relative growth rate (RGR).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Milk yield of 59 beef cows that calved in late September through November was measured monthly in early and late lactation and biweekly during midlactation. Milk yield was estimated by milking with a machine after over-night separation of cows from calves. Concentration of plasma cholesterol of cows and calves was measured when calves averaged 44, 93, 136, and 178 d of age (SD = 17 d).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Coefficients for individual and maternal breed composition and the expected contributions of individual and maternal heterosis and breed source of cytoplasm were assigned to 42,554 primiparous Holstein-Friesian, Jersey, and crossbred cows. The individual additive genetic breed effect influenced all milk production traits. Highly significant maternal additive genetic breed effects equivalent to 3% of the mean were identified for milk yield and milk fat percentage.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Production of 18, 12-yr-old Angus cows was summarized as the averaged weaning weight deviations of each cow's calves from their like-aged, like-sexed and similarly managed contemporaries. These cows had spent a large part of their productive lives on pastures dominated by endophyte-infected tall fescue, so differences among them in calf production might have been induced partly by differences in susceptibility to fescue toxicosis. Cows were divided randomly into two groups for a 31-d summer feeding trial.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

From 1979 through 1987, British breed and crossbred cows were mated to Simmental, Pinzgauer or Tarentaise bulls or to Hereford-Angus crossbred bulls. Beginning in 1982, continental European crossbred females also entered the herd, to be mated for first calving to Hereford-Angus or Angus bulls and as cows to continental European or Hereford-Angus bulls. In progeny of British breed and crossbred cows, dam breed effects on birth and weaning weight were not important, but continental European crossbred calves were heavier than British crossbred contemporaries at birth and weaning.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Thirty years and 23 yr of life history data from a Hereford herd in Arizona and an Angus herd in Wyoming, respectively, were analyzed. Longevity averaged 4.21 +/- .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ewes of eight crossbred groups, born in 1973 and 1974, were maintained under two pasture management systems for five and four production years, respectively. After that experiment terminated, those crossbred ewes produced Polypay-sired lambs in 1979 and were then sold. Ewe lambs from those three-bred crosses were backcrossed to Polypay rams to produce lambs from 1980 to 1983.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Behavioral genetics.

Vet Clin North Am Food Anim Pract

July 1987

Certain farm animal behaviors are subject partially to genetic control. This article provides examples of how knowledge of genetic differences and genetic modification of farm animal behavior might enhance both human and animal welfare. The first part of the article deals with genetic differences among species or breeds, and the second part considers differences that exist within a particular breed or population.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The relationship between sperm nuclear chromatin structure and fertility was evaluated in two groups of Holstein bulls: Group 1, 49 mature bulls, and Group 2, 18 young bulls. Fertility ratings had been estimated for Group 1 and nonreturn rates were known for Group 2. Semen samples were measured by the sperm chromatin structure assay (SCSA): sperm were treated to induce partial in situ DNA denaturation, stained with acridine orange, and evaluated by flow cytometry.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Six hundred sixteen ewes of six strains were inoculated twice with ovalbumin in Freunds' incomplete adjuvant. To quantify the humoral immune response to the foreign antigen, blood samples were collected from all ewes 1 wk post-second injection. Blood samples were also collected between 4 and 40 h of age from their 709 lambs, to examine genetic differences in ability of lambs to acquire maternal anti-ovalbumin antibodies.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Three sets of blood samples were obtained from beef calves of two experimental populations and assayed for various immunological measurements. The first set of samples was taken between 24 and 48 h after birth and quantified for IgG1 concentration. A second set was taken immediately prior to vaccination for infectious bovine rhinotracheitis virus (IBRV; at an average age of 164 d) and a third set taken 60 d post-vaccination.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Genetic factors affecting spermatogenesis, sperm morphology, and chromatin structure in mice were estimated using a diallel cross of the inbred lines C3H/HeJ, C57BL/6J, DBA/2J, and BALB/cByJ. Flow cytometry of acridine orange stained cells was used to evaluate proportions of testicular tetraploid, diploid, and haploid cells and nuclear chromatin structure of sperm, measured by resistance of chromatin to in situ acid denaturation, and quantified by the ratio of double- to single-stranded DNA (alpha t). Percent morphologically abnormal sperm was scored by light microscopy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF