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Montbéliarde cattle
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Montbéliarde cattle

Place of Origin France
Origin The name Montbéliarde was first used by Joseph Graber in 1872, when exhibiting a group of cattle at the Langres agricultural competition. Before this the local stock from indigenous multipurpose breeds such as Fémeline and Tourache (later known as Comtoise) had been improved by Mennonite farmers from Switzerland, and named Franco-Swiss. In 1889, the breed was accepted officially, and a stud book was founded. Since 1980, the breed has been selected for good roughage conversion. After 1900, many cattle were sold to the Midi region and Algeria.
In the 1970s, Red Holstein was crossed into the breed. At the same time, they sporadically crossed with Fleckvieh bulls, but this was not very successful. In the 1990s, Montbéliarde cattle were used for crossing into the Danish Red cattle and Vorderwalder Cattle breeds.
Purpose Dairy breed with the milk is particularly well suited to cheesemaking because of a high frequency of kappa casein BB variants, giving higher yields of cheese. Being of less extreme dairy type than modern Holsteins, the cows have lower milk yields, but better longevity and fertility and lower cell counts in the milk, indicating lower mastitis incidence.
Montbéliarde cattle are mainly a dairy breed, but have better beef characteristics than Holstein cattle. Nearly 400,000 milk recorded Montbéliarde cows are in France with an average adult lactation of 7486 litres at 3.9% butterfat and 3.45% protein. The milk protein is of a type well suited to cheese-making, and some herds are fed a hay-based diet to produce milk specifically for this purpose. Cull cows and bull calves are worth more than Holsteins. The breed has spread to many countries and is becoming popular for crossing with Holsteins to give improved longevity and fertility.

Appearance The animals are red pied with white heads
Horns Short horns
Cows Average Weight 600 - 700 kg (1,323 - 1,543 lbs)
Bulls Average Weight 953 - 1134 kg. (2,100 - 2,500 lbs.)
Other Considerations Recently, crossbreeding of Montbéliarde and Holstein has become quite popular in the US. Studies have shown the crosses enjoy many benefits over their respective purebreds. For the Holsteins, this includes many benefits in health traits such as fertility, longevity and calving ease. For the Montbéliarde, improved milk production is shown with the average from one study in particular being above 25,000 lb of milk per cow. Sierra Desert Breeders and Creative Genetics of California supply Montbéliarde semen and embryos in the US.
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