Morphological assessment of the Zebu Bororo (Wodaabé) cattle of Niger in the West African zebu framework
A total of 357 adult cows and 29 sires belonging to the long-horned Niger Zebu Bororo cattle population were assessed for 13 body measurements and 11 qualitative traits. Data were jointly analysed with 311 cows and 64 sires belonging to other four West African zebu cattle populations, sampled in...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2017-10-01
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Series: | Archives Animal Breeding |
Online Access: | https://www.arch-anim-breed.net/60/363/2017/aab-60-363-2017.pdf |
Summary: | A total of 357 adult cows and 29 sires belonging to the long-horned Niger
Zebu Bororo cattle population were assessed for 13 body measurements and
11 qualitative traits. Data were jointly analysed with 311 cows and 64 sires
belonging to other four West African zebu cattle populations, sampled in
Burkina Faso and Benin, representative of both the short-horned and the
long-horned West African zebu groups using multivariate statistical methods.
Besides the other long-horned zebu breed analysed (Zebu Mbororo of Burkina
Faso), Zebu Bororo cattle tended to have the highest mean values for all body
measurements. Mahalanobis distance matrices further informed that pairs
involving Zebu Bororo cattle had the higher differentiation of the dataset.
However, contour plots constructed using eigenvalues computed via principal
component analysis (PCA) illustrated a lack of differentiation among West African zebu cattle populations at the body measurements level. Correspondence
analysis carried out on the 11 qualitative traits recorded allowed for
ascertaining a clear differentiation between the Zebu Bororo and the other zebu
cattle populations analysed which, in turn, did not show a clear
differentiation at the qualitative type traits level. In our data, Zebu
Bororo cattle had in high frequency qualitative features such as dropped
ears, lyre-shaped horns and red-pied coat colour that are not frequently
present in the other West African zebu populations analysed. A directional
selection due to a rough consensus of the stock-keepers may be hypothesised.
Performance of further analyses to assess the degree in which such breeding
differences may be related to genetic or production differences are advised. |
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ISSN: | 0003-9438 2363-9822 |