- Polled livestock
Polled livestock (or pollards) are
livestock of normally-horned species that are lacking horns, either naturally or as a result of humans removing them or preventing their growth.Prevention of horn growth is most commonly done by "dehorning" or "disbudding" – burning out the horn buds of a young animal, sometimes under
local anaesthetic . before the horns have grown.Some livestock are "naturally polled" due to a
gene which suppresses horn development. These include manycattle breeds, includingAngus andGalloway , and some sheep breeds, includingSuffolk sheep ; in some other sheep breeds, such areMerino , only the females are polled.Natural polling also occurs in goats, but development of wholly polled strains is possible, as the polled trait is not created by a single mutation, but is part of a Polled Intersex Syndrome. If two polled goats are mated the offspring are often infertile.
In cattle, the polled
gene is genetically dominant. Naturally polled breeds have been used to produce polled strains of normally horned breeds.Polled animals occasionally have "scurs" – small, loose horny growths in the skin where their horns would be. In cattle this trait has traced to an
allele of differentgene , on a differentchromosome , than the gene responsible for polled cattle. However the presence of theallele for scurs can only be seen in a polled animal, because the animal has to be polled to see the scurs. . [cite journal
last = Long | first = C. R.
title=Inheritance of the horned, scurred, and polled condition in cattle
journal=Journal of Heredity
year=1978 | volume=69 | pages=395–400 ]Polled livestock are preferred by many
farmer s for a variety of reasons, the foremost being that horns can pose a physical danger – to humans, other livestock and equipment. Horns may also interfere with equipment used with livestock (such as acattle crush ), or they may become damaged during handling.In other circumstances horned animals may be preferred, for example to help the animal defend itself against
predator s, to allow the attachment of headyoke s to draughtox en, to provide a hand-hold on smaller animals such as sheep, or for aesthetic reasons – for example in some breeds the retention of horns is required for showing.ee also
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Livestock dehorning
=References=
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