Deoni cattle

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Deoni bull
Deoni cow

Deoni (Kannada:ದೇವನಿ/Marathi:देवनि) is a native breed of cattle in India. They originated in the taluks of Basavakalyan, Bidar and Bhalki of Bidar district in Karnataka and adjoining Latur district of the state of Maharashtra. [1][2]

Known to be both good milk yielders and draft animals, the Deoni is considered as an important dual-purpose breed of cattle in India. These animals are quite popular in the tracts of former Hyderabad State which is now Telangana and adjoining districts of Karnataka and Maharashtra. Their crosses with Holstein and Jersey are very good milk yielders. Deoni cattle are hardy and well adapted to their breeding tract and constitute an important cattle genetic resource of India.

Origin

The Deoni breed of cattle also sometimes known as Dongari/Dongarpati ("of the hills"), Surti or Deccani, has been evolved within the last 200 years. The name of the breed is derived from the Deoni Taluka of Latur district of Maharashtra. It is claimed that it has been developed from a strain descended from a mixture of Gir, Dangi and local cattle. A contribution from the Gir type of cattle is quite evident in the formation of the head and ears, and also of the horns to a certain extent. They also show a great similarity in general conformation and ruggedness to the Dangi cattle of Bombay State, an area which is not far from the Deoni cattle breeding area (Joshi, 1953).

Characteristics

The Deoni is a medium-sized animal which resembles the Gir in physical structure to a large extent. It is found in three colour variations viz. Wannera (clear white with black colour at the sides of the face), Balankya (clear white with black spots on the lower side of the body) and Shevera (white body with irregular black spots). The body is moderately developed and symmetrical with distinct muscles. Head is masculine, alert, broad and slightly convex. The colour of the head is black and white in Wannera and Shevera and completely white in the Balankya strain. The forehead is prominent, broad, slightly bulged and white in all the strains; ears are long and drooping with slightly curved tips; horns are medium, thick, apart and emerge from the sides of the poll; tips of the horns are blunt; and eyes are prominent, bright and alert with black eyebrows. The hump is massive and well developed in males and small in females. The neck is short, strong and well developed. Dewlap is thick, pendulous, and muscular with folds. It is more pendulous in males than in females. The chest is deep and wide. The skin of these animals is thick and loosely attached to the body. The tail is long reaching below the hock with black and white switch. The udder is well attached and medium in size with squarely placed black teats. Bulls are characterized by blackish scrotums of a good size. The animals are docile and calm. The hair is soft and short. The cows have a fairly well-developed udder. The hooves are well-made and shapely and of a black color. The body is massive and upstanding with considerable depth and gives an appearance of strength. (ANSI) Horn length, ear length, head length, chest girth, body length and height averaged 17.61, 26.18, 49.82, 151.82, 120.11 and 122.22 cm in adult cows and 19.97, 26.67, 53.68, 163.55, 129.59 and 134.36 cm in bullocks.

Milch Performance

Cows of this breed are moderately good milkers, yielding about 1135 kg in a lactation period of 300 days. Well-bred herds in farms yield on an average up to 1580 kg during the same period. (Sastry, 2005). Government farms in Maharashtra have reported that Deoni cows have an average age at first calving at 1586.9 ± 29.4 days, lactation milk yield of 859.1 ± 23.6 lit, lactation length of 280.5 ± 4.6 days, and dry period of 173.3 ± 7.4 days. (Singhal, 1980). The attainable yield per lactation in Deoni cows is reported to be 880 kg. The average fat content in the milk of Deoni cows was 4.3 percent.

Cows showed their first estrus at the average age of 36 months. Average age at first calving was 46 months. Service period and inter-calving period averaged 170 and 447 days. (Singh, 2002).

Draught Performance

Deoni bullocks are good for heavy work and are particularly suitable for intensive cultivation. A bullock pair was able to pull the load of 10-11 quintals using wooden heavy cart with wooden wheels on kutcha (muddy) road. They are able to pull a maximum of 28-30 quintals of load using a light steel bullock cart with tyre wheels on tar roads for about 10–15 km. One pair of bullocks can pull the medium plough for about seven to eight hours a day and can plough about half an acre of land. The bullocks show their maximum potential at five to six years of age and maintain it up to 10–12 years of age. (Singh, 2002).

Management Practices

Traditionally, Deoni cattle are maintained under a semi-intensive system of management. They are usually reared by grazing in fallow lands, dry lands or bunds of the farms. The breeding bulls are usually stall fed. Very few farmers grow green fodder (maize and sorghum). The animals are also provided with maize/sorghum stovers, paddy straw, wheat straw and sugarcane tops as well as groundnut, urd (Vigno mungo) and arhar (Cajanus cajan) haulms. The calves suckle their dams before and after milking. Quantity of the dry fodder fed depends mainly on the availability of green fodder in the grazing areas. Some amount of concentrate is also given to the milking cows and working bullocks.

The animals are housed in either separate houses or a part of the owner’s residence during the night. No weaning is practiced in the breeding tract. The males are separated after 20 months of age and trained for agriculture operations. They are usually castrated at 30 months of age and used for draught work at three years of age. The calf and adult mortality is negligible and the breed is hardy and well adapted to tropical drought-prone areas.

Government Farms

Deoni Cattle Breeding Farm, Gudgaripalli, Andhra Pradesh. Govt Farm, Kampasagar, Andhra Pradesh. Livestock Research & Information Centre (Deoni), Hallikhed(B), KVAFSU, Bidar, Karnataka. Govt. Farm, Udgir, Maharashtra. Livestock Farm, Parbhani, MAFSU, Maharashtra.

References

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it is a dual purpose breed,reared for milk and draft purpose.head is black,rest of the body is white with black or white patches.it has straight and strong leg

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