Beef Cattle Live Animal Assessments

From ICAR Wiki
Revision as of 05:52, 20 March 2023 by Rbanks (talk | contribs)

3.6 Live animal assessments

3.6.1 Assessment of muscularity

Linear scoring is a technique which allows a systematic description of an animal’s morphology. Linear scoring reveals part of the animal’s economic value and, if the scored traits are heritable, part of its genetic value. Economic and environmental conditions vary over time and between countries so the economic importance of each scored trait may differ depending on the circumstances. The specific relative importance has to be determined by the responsible breeding organisations.

As well as the description of a single animal, data from linear scorings are used for genetic evaluation of dairy, dual purpose and specialised beef breeds.

Many breeders, breed societies and those in the AI industry use linear scoring in routinely performed animal recording. In beef breeds linear scoring of muscle shape is particularly important as an indicator of saleable beef yield per animal, and thus is an indispensable part of the beef recording system.

To meet the need for an efficient world wide, genetic exchange, international comparison of breeds, and demand for more comparability of individual cattle between countries, procedures for linear scoring of muscularity should be harmonised. This need is best served by an internationally recognised set of recommendations.

The following recommendation may help organisations design a linear scoring system for beef performance recording which suits their market conditions, and which may lead to more homogeneous and comparable scores between different countries.

The present recommendation refers only to linear scoring of muscularity, which is usually part of a complete integrated scoring system within breed. It does not deal with the full spectrum of linear scoring. A complete linear scoring system for a given breed often includes further items such as skeletal traits, udder, legs etc.

The following recommendation may be used both for dual-purpose breeds as well as for specialised beef breeds. Linear scoring can be conducted on any category of animals, such as male and female calves, heifers, cows, bulls and steers.

3.6.2 Recommended approach to be taken in organising Linear Scoring

Linear scoring has the following characteristics:

Linear scoring has the following characteristics:

  1. Linear scoring is a systematic description of an animal’s morphology.
  2. It is usual for a linear scoring scheme to takes several anatomical sites into account.
  3. The anatomical sites must be precisely defined.
  4. Within one single anatomical site, linear scoring provides a description of the biological extremes and a number of intermediates.
  5. The scores represent an ordinal scale, which should allow for sufficient discrimination in the degree of expression of the linear trait.
  6. The extremes and the intermediates are ordered according to the degree of expression of the trait. For example, thin and thick, long and short etc.
  7. A high or a low score has no particular meaning and it is not necessarily desirable or undesirable.
  8. By convention one of the extremes receives the score ‘1’; the other levels receive a number in ascending order which describes the expression of the trait.
  9. A scale from 1-9 points is recommended for most traits.
  10. Where the range of biological extremes is large in the population of animals under consideration, (e.g. double muscling or an across breed recording scheme) the scale may need to be extended. A 1 to 15-point scale is recommended in such circumstances.
  11. The scoring system should be consistent across contemporary groups, i.e. breeds/breed groups.
  12. Linear scoring should if possible be conducted on animals which belong to the same category in terms of sex and age.
  13. For each category of animals, the scoring scale for muscle shape should be the same.
  14. Scoring for muscularity relates to muscle shape only.

The traits which should, as a minimum, be taken into account in a muscularity linear scoring scheme are:

  1. Shoulder width.
  2. Loin width.
  3. Rump length.
  4. Rump width.
  5. Thighs width.
  6. Thighs depth.
  7. Thighs inside.
  8. Thighs rounding.

The following is a graphical representation of the linear muscular anatomical sites.

File:Type scoring diagram.pdf