The anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breed

In a cross-sectional study, data from records of cattle slaughtered over a 1-year period at a large abattoir in South West England were analysed using an ordered category response model to investigate the inter-relationships between age, sex and breed on development of the permanent anterior (PA) te...

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Main Authors: K.J. Whiting, S.N. Brown, W.J. Browne, P.J. Hadley, T.G. Knowles
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2013-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
age
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731113000499
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spelling doaj-2671b8aace7648198cd93c67560e37f62021-06-06T04:48:47ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112013-01-017813231331The anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breedK.J. Whiting0S.N. Brown1W.J. Browne2P.J. Hadley3T.G. Knowles4Corners, Smithincott, Cullompton EX15 3DG, UKSchool of Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Langford, Bristol BS40 5DU, UKSchool of Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Langford, Bristol BS40 5DU, UKEBLEX AHDB, The Loadstone Suite, Creech Castle, Bathpool, Taunton TA1 2DX, UKSchool of Veterinary Science, University of Bristol, Langford, Bristol BS40 5DU, UKIn a cross-sectional study, data from records of cattle slaughtered over a 1-year period at a large abattoir in South West England were analysed using an ordered category response model to investigate the inter-relationships between age, sex and breed on development of the permanent anterior (PA) teeth. Using the model, transition points at which there was a 50% probability of membership of each category of paired PA teeth were identified. Data from ∼60 000 animals were initially analysed for age and sex effect. The age transition was found to be ∼23 months moving from zero to two teeth; 30 months for two to four teeth; 37 months for four to six teeth and 42 months for six to eight teeth. Males were found to develop, on average, ∼22 days earlier than females across all stages. A reduced data set of ∼23 000 animals registered as pure-bred only was used to compare breed and type interactions and to investigate sex effects within the sub-categories. Breeds were grouped into dairy and beef-type and beef breeds split into native and continental. It was found that dairy-types moved through the transition points earlier than beef-types across all stages (interval varying between ∼8 and 12 weeks) and that collectively, native beef breeds moved through the transition points by up to 3 weeks earlier than the continental beef breeds. Interestingly, in contrast to beef animals, dairy females matured before dairy males. However, the magnitude of the difference between dairy females and males diminished at the later stages of development. Differences were found between breeds. Across the first three stages, Ayrshires and Guernseys developed between 3 and 6 weeks later than Friesian/Holsteins and Simmental, Limousin and Blonde Aquitaine 6 and 8 weeks later than Aberdeen Angus. Herefords, Charolais and South Devon developed later but by a smaller interval and Red Devon and Galloway showed the largest individual effect with transition delayed by 8 to 12 weeks.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731113000499cattledentitionageanterior tooth developmentgrowth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author K.J. Whiting
S.N. Brown
W.J. Browne
P.J. Hadley
T.G. Knowles
spellingShingle K.J. Whiting
S.N. Brown
W.J. Browne
P.J. Hadley
T.G. Knowles
The anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breed
Animal
cattle
dentition
age
anterior tooth development
growth
author_facet K.J. Whiting
S.N. Brown
W.J. Browne
P.J. Hadley
T.G. Knowles
author_sort K.J. Whiting
title The anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breed
title_short The anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breed
title_full The anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breed
title_fullStr The anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breed
title_full_unstemmed The anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breed
title_sort anterior tooth development of cattle presented for slaughter: an analysis of age, sex and breed
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2013-01-01
description In a cross-sectional study, data from records of cattle slaughtered over a 1-year period at a large abattoir in South West England were analysed using an ordered category response model to investigate the inter-relationships between age, sex and breed on development of the permanent anterior (PA) teeth. Using the model, transition points at which there was a 50% probability of membership of each category of paired PA teeth were identified. Data from ∼60 000 animals were initially analysed for age and sex effect. The age transition was found to be ∼23 months moving from zero to two teeth; 30 months for two to four teeth; 37 months for four to six teeth and 42 months for six to eight teeth. Males were found to develop, on average, ∼22 days earlier than females across all stages. A reduced data set of ∼23 000 animals registered as pure-bred only was used to compare breed and type interactions and to investigate sex effects within the sub-categories. Breeds were grouped into dairy and beef-type and beef breeds split into native and continental. It was found that dairy-types moved through the transition points earlier than beef-types across all stages (interval varying between ∼8 and 12 weeks) and that collectively, native beef breeds moved through the transition points by up to 3 weeks earlier than the continental beef breeds. Interestingly, in contrast to beef animals, dairy females matured before dairy males. However, the magnitude of the difference between dairy females and males diminished at the later stages of development. Differences were found between breeds. Across the first three stages, Ayrshires and Guernseys developed between 3 and 6 weeks later than Friesian/Holsteins and Simmental, Limousin and Blonde Aquitaine 6 and 8 weeks later than Aberdeen Angus. Herefords, Charolais and South Devon developed later but by a smaller interval and Red Devon and Galloway showed the largest individual effect with transition delayed by 8 to 12 weeks.
topic cattle
dentition
age
anterior tooth development
growth
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731113000499
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