Aberdeen Angus: Difference between revisions

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{{Short description|Scottish breed of beef cattle}}
{{short description|Scottish breed of beef cattle}}
{{Redirect|Black Angus|the steakhouse|Black Angus Steakhouse}}
{{redirect|Black Angus|the steakhouse|Black Angus Steakhouse}}
{{pp-pc|small=yes|expiry=1 January 2026}}
{{pp-pc|small=yes|expiry=1 January 2026}}
{{Use British English|date=January 2018}}
{{use British English|date=January 2018}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2015}}
{{use list-defined references|date=September 2025}}
{{Infobox cattle breed
{{use dmy dates|date=November 2015}}
{{infobox cattle breed
| name          = Aberdeen Angus  
| name          = Aberdeen Angus  
| image        = Aberdeen Angus bull - geograph.org.uk - 546924.jpg
| image        = Aberdeen Angus bull - geograph.org.uk - 546924.jpg
Line 10: Line 11:
| image_alt    = head-on view of a bull
| image_alt    = head-on view of a bull
| image_caption = A bull near [[Melton Constable]], in [[Norfolk]]
| image_caption = A bull near [[Melton Constable]], in [[Norfolk]]
| status        = {{ubl|[[FAO]] (2007), worldwide: not at risk{{r|barb|p=143}}|[[DAD-IS]] (2021): not at risk{{r|dad}}|{{nobreak|[[Rare Breeds Survival Trust|RBST]] (2021), overall: UK native breeds{{r|rbst2}}}}|RBST (2021), Native type: at risk{{r|rbst2}}}}
| image2        = Aberdeen Angus im Gadental 2.JPG
| image_size2  =
| image_alt2    =
| image_caption2= Cow and calf in the Austrian Alps
| status        = {{ubl|{{nobreak|[[FAO]] (2007), worldwide: not at risk{{r|barb|p=143}}}}|[[DAD-IS]] (2021): not at risk{{r|dad}}|{{ubl|[[Rare Breeds Survival Trust|RBST]] (2021)|{{spaces|6}}Overall: UK native breeds{{r|rbst2}}|{{spaces|6}}Native type: at risk{{r|rbst2}}}}}}
| altname      = {{ubl|Angus|Aberdeen-Angus|Angus Doddie|Buchan Humlie}}
| altname      = {{ubl|Angus|Aberdeen-Angus|Angus Doddie|Buchan Humlie}}
| country      = United Kingdom
| country      = United Kingdom
Line 16: Line 21:
| standard      =  
| standard      =  
| use          = beef
| use          = beef
| nickname      =  
| weight        =  
| maleweight    = 1000 kg{{r|dad}}
| maleweight    = 1000 kg{{r|dad}}
| femaleweight  = 650 kg{{r|dad}}
| femaleweight  = 650 kg{{r|dad}}
| height        =
| maleheight    = 145 cm{{r|dad}}
| maleheight    = 145 cm{{r|dad}}
| femaleheight  = 135 cm{{r|dad}}
| femaleheight  = 135 cm{{r|dad}}
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| coat          = black or red
| coat          = black or red
| horn          = polled
| horn          = polled
| subspecies    = Taurus
| subspecies    = taurus
| note          =
| note          =  
}}
}}


The '''Aberdeen Angus''', sometimes simply '''Angus''', is a [[Scotland|Scottish]] [[List of cattle breeds|breed]] of small [[beef cattle]]. It derives from cattle native to the [[Scottish counties|counties]] of [[Aberdeenshire (historic)|Aberdeen]], [[Banffshire|Banff]], [[Kincardineshire|Kincardine]] and [[Angus, Scotland|Angus]] in north-eastern [[Scotland]].{{r|cabi|p=96}} In 2018 the breed accounted for over 17% of the beef production in the United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite news |title=Aberdeen Angus set to be UK's most popular beef breed |url=https://www.farminguk.com/news/aberdeen-angus-set-to-be-uk-s-most-popular-beef-breed_53333.html |access-date=5 November 2021 |agency=Farming UK}}</ref>
The '''Aberdeen Angus''', sometimes simply '''Angus''', is a Scottish [[List of cattle breeds|breed]] of small [[beef cattle]]. It derives from cattle native to the [[Scottish counties|counties]] of [[Aberdeenshire (historic)|Aberdeen]], [[Banffshire|Banff]], [[Kincardineshire|Kincardine]] and [[Angus, Scotland|Angus]] in north-eastern Scotland.{{r|cabi|p=96}} In 2018 it accounted for over 17% of the beef production in the United Kingdom.{{r|fuk}}


The Angus is naturally [[Polled livestock|polled]] and solid black or red;{{r|rbst}} the [[udder]] may be white.{{cn|date=July 2023}} The cattle have been exported to many countries of the world; there are large populations in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South America and the United States,{{r|rbst}} where it has developed into two separate and distinct breeds, the [[American Angus]] and [[Red Angus]].{{r|cabi|p=105}} In some countries it has been [[selective breeding|bred]] to be taller than the native Scottish stock.{{r|rbst}}
The Angus is naturally [[Polled livestock|polled]] and solid black or red;{{r|rbst}} the [[udder]] may be white.{{cn|date=July 2023}} The cattle have been exported to many countries of the world; there are large populations in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South America and the United States,{{r|rbst}} where it has developed into two separate and distinct breeds, the [[American Angus]] and the [[Red Angus]].{{r|cabi|p=105}} In some countries it has been [[selective breeding|bred]] to be taller than the native Scottish stock.{{r|rbst}}


Its [[conservation status]] worldwide is "not at risk";{{r|barb|p=143}} in the United Kingdom the original Native Aberdeen Angus – cattle not influenced by cross-breeding with imported stock – is listed by the [[Rare Breeds Survival Trust]] as "at risk".{{r|rbst2}}
Its [[conservation status]] worldwide is "not at risk";{{r|barb|p=143}} in the United Kingdom the original Native Aberdeen Angus – cattle not influenced by cross-breeding with imported stock – is listed by the [[Rare Breeds Survival Trust]] as "at risk".{{r|rbst2}}
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== History ==
== History ==
[[File:Angus bull 1856.jpg|thumb|alt=black-and-white print of a large bull with pendent scrotum|Historic [[salt print]] of a bull at an agricultural fair in Paris in 1856]]
[[File:Angus bull 1856.jpg|thumb|alt=black-and-white print of a large bull with pendent scrotum|Historic [[salt print]] of a bull at an agricultural fair in Paris in 1856]]
Aberdeen Angus cattle have been recorded in north-eastern Scotland since at least the sixteenth century.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.britannicrarebreeds.co.uk/breedinfo/cow_aberdeenangus.php |title=Britannic Rare Breeds – Angus Cattle |access-date=25 June 2015 |website=Britannic Rare Breeds |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150620090121/http://www.britannicrarebreeds.co.uk/breedinfo/cow_aberdeenangus.php |archive-date=20 June 2015  }}</ref> For some time before the 1800s, the hornless cattle in [[Angus, Scotland|Angus]] were called "Angus Doddies", while those in the historic province of [[Buchan]] (later part of [[Aberdeenshire]]) were known as "Buchan Humlies",{{r|james|p=12}} both "doddie" and "humlie" meaning “[[polled (livestock)|polled]].{{r|james|p=36}}
For some time before the 1800s, the hornless cattle in [[Angus, Scotland|Angus]] were called "Angus Doddies", while those in the historic province of [[Buchan]] (later part of [[Aberdeenshire]]) were known as "Buchan Humlies",{{r|james|p=12}} both "doddie" and "humlie" meaning “[[polled (livestock)|polled]].{{r|james|p=36}}


In 1824, [[William McCombie]] of Tillyfour, later the [[Member of Parliament (United Kingdom)|Member of Parliament]] for [[West Aberdeenshire (UK Parliament constituency)|West Aberdeenshire]], began to improve the stock and is regarded today as the father of the breed.{{r|osu}}
In 1824, [[William McCombie]] of Tillyfour, later the [[Member of Parliament (United Kingdom)|Member of Parliament]] for [[West Aberdeenshire (UK Parliament constituency)|West Aberdeenshire]], began to improve the stock and is regarded today as the father of the breed.{{cn|date=September 2025}}


The breed was officially recognised in 1835, and was initially registered together with the [[Galloway (cattle)|Galloway]] in the Polled Herd Book.{{r|cabi|p=96}} A society was formed in 1879.{{cn|date=September 2021}} The cattle became commonplace throughout the [[British Isles]] in the mid-twentieth century.<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://www.thecattlesite.com/breeds/beef/7/aberdeen-angus/|title = The Cattle Site – Angus Breeds|access-date = 25 June 2015|website = The Cattle Site}}</ref>
The breed was officially recognised in 1835, and was initially registered together with the [[Galloway (cattle)|Galloway]] in the Polled Herd Book.{{r|cabi|p=96}} A [[breed society]] was formed in 1879.{{cn|date=September 2021}} The cattle became commonplace throughout the [[British Isles]] in the mid-twentieth century.<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://www.thecattlesite.com/breeds/beef/7/aberdeen-angus/|title = The Cattle Site – Angus Breeds|access-date = 25 June 2015|website = The Cattle Site}}</ref>


=== Argentina ===
=== Argentina ===
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=== Australia ===
=== Australia ===
[[File:Judging Aberdeen Argus bulls, Royal Sydney Easter Show (8657343610).jpg|thumb|alt=black-and-white photograph of a row of small black bulls, each held on a halter|Judging bulls at the [[Royal Sydney Easter Show]] of 1935]]
[[File:Judging Aberdeen Argus bulls, Royal Sydney Easter Show, 8657343610 (detail).jpg|thumb|alt=black-and-white photograph of a row of small black bulls, each held on a halter|Judging bulls at the [[Royal Sydney Easter Show]] of 1935]]
Angus cattle were first introduced to [[Van Diemen's Land]] (now Tasmania) in the 1820s, and to the southern mainland in 1840. The breed is now found in all Australian states and territories with {{val|62,000}} calves registered with Angus Australia in 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.angusaustralia.com.au/Flyers/AngusCattleinAustralia.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=28 August 2013 |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120322083933/http://www.angusaustralia.com.au/Flyers/AngusCattleinAustralia.pdf |archive-date=22 March 2012 }}</ref>
Angus cattle were first introduced to [[Van Diemen's Land]] (now Tasmania) in the 1820s, and to the southern mainland in 1840. The breed is now found in all Australian states and territories with {{val|62,000}} calves registered with Angus Australia in 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.angusaustralia.com.au/Flyers/AngusCattleinAustralia.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=28 August 2013 |url-status = dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120322083933/http://www.angusaustralia.com.au/Flyers/AngusCattleinAustralia.pdf |archive-date=22 March 2012 }}</ref>


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</ref>
</ref>


On 21 November 1883, the [[American Angus Association]] was founded in [[Chicago]], [[Illinois]].<ref name="aaa">{{cite web
On 21 November 1883, the [[American Angus Association]] was founded in Chicago, Illinois.<ref name="aaa">{{cite web
  | last = American Angus Association
  | last = American Angus Association
  | title = Angus History
  | title = Angus History
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===Germany===
===Germany===
[[File:Aberdeen Angus im Gadental 2.JPG|thumb|Cow and calf in the {{ill|Gadental|de|Europaschutzgebiet Gadental}}, in [[Vorarlberg]] in Austria]]
 
A separate breed was cross bred in Germany called the [[German Angus cattle|German Angus]]. It is a cross between the Angus and several different cattle such as the [[German Black Pied Cattle]], [[Gelbvieh]], and [[Fleckvieh cattle|Fleckvieh]]. The cattle are usually larger than the Angus and appear in black and red colours.<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://interboves.com/eng/breeds.html|title = German Angus cattle information.|access-date = 10 August 2015|website = Interboves}}</ref>
A separate breed was cross bred in Germany called the [[German Angus cattle|German Angus]]. It is a cross between the Angus and several different cattle such as the [[German Black Pied Cattle]], [[Gelbvieh]], and [[Fleckvieh cattle|Fleckvieh]]. The cattle are usually larger than the Angus and appear in black and red colours.<ref>{{Cite web|url = http://interboves.com/eng/breeds.html|title = German Angus cattle information.|access-date = 10 August 2015|website = Interboves}}</ref>


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== Use ==
== Use ==


The Aberdeen Angus is reared for [[beef]]. The meat can be marketed as superior due to its marbled appearance. This has led to many markets, including Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa and the United Kingdom to adopt it into the mainstream.{{r|nsw}} Angus cattle can also be used in [[cross-breeding]] to reduce the likelihood of [[dystocia]] (difficult calving) or, because of their dominant polled gene, to produce polled calves.<ref>{{cite web
The Aberdeen Angus is reared principally for beef. Bulls are used extensively as [[terminal sire]]s on cows of other breeds – particularly dairy breeds – to produce cross-bred beef calves.{{r|cabi|p=97}} The meat can be marketed as superior due to its marbled appearance.{{cn|date=September 2025}}
|title      = Angus
 
|publisher  = Cattle Today
Bulls can also be used to transmit characteristics including the [[polled gene]] (for ease of handling) and – with the aim of lowering the incidence of [[dystocia]] – the easy calving of cows.{{r|cabi|p=97|nsw}}
|url        = http://cattle-today.com/angus.htm
 
|access-date  = 29 October 2006
Many modern breeds derive from the Aberdeen Angus or from its American derivatives, the [[American Angus]] and [[Red Angus]] of the United States. Among those created by cross-breeding are: the [[Murray Grey]] and [[Wokalup (cattle)|Wokalup]] of Australia; the [[Ibagé]] (with [[Nelore]]) of Brazil; the [[Pee Wee (cattle)|Pee Wee]] of Canada; the [[Romosinuano]] (with [[Costeño con Cuernos]]) of Colombia; the [[Jamaica Black (cattle)|Jamaica Black]] (with Brahman); the [[Japanese Polled]] (with indigenous Japanese cattle); the [[Afrigus]] (with [[Afrikaner (cattle)|Afrikaner]]) of South Africa;{{r|cabi|p=104}} the [[Volynsk]] and [[Znamensk (cattle)|Znamensk]] of Ukraine; and the [[Africangus]] (with Afrikaner), the [[Amerifax]] (with [[Beef Friesian]]), the [[Barzona]] (with Afrikaner, [[Hereford (cattle)|Hereford]] and [[Santa Gertrudis (cattle)|Santa Gertrudis]]), the [[Brangus]] (with [[Brahman (cattle)|Brahman]]), the [[Holgus]] (with [[Holstein (cattle)|Holstein]]) and the [[Regus (cattle)|Regus]] (Red Angus × Hereford) of the United States{{r|cabi|p=97}} The [[Australian Lowline]] is not a cross-breed but the unexpected result of a research experiment using only Aberdeen Angus stock.{{r|cabi|p=233}}
|archive-url  = https://web.archive.org/web/20061017084329/http://cattle-today.com/angus.htm
|archive-date = 17 October 2006
|url-status = dead
|df          = dmy-all
}}</ref>


== References ==
== References ==
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<ref name=cabi>Valerie Porter, Lawrence Alderson, Stephen J.G. Hall, D. Phillip Sponenberg (2016). [https://books.google.it/books?id=2UEJDAAAQBAJ&hl=en ''Mason's World Encyclopedia of Livestock Breeds and Breeding''] (sixth edition). Wallingford: CABI. {{ISBN|9781780647944}}.</ref>
<ref name=cabi>Valerie Porter, Lawrence Alderson, Stephen J.G. Hall, D. Phillip Sponenberg (2016). [https://books.google.it/books?id=2UEJDAAAQBAJ&hl=en ''Mason's World Encyclopedia of Livestock Breeds and Breeding''] (sixth edition). Wallingford: CABI. {{ISBN|9781780647944}}.</ref>


<ref name=dad>[https://fao-dadis-breed-detail.web.app/?country=GBR&specie=Cattle&breed=Aberdeen-Angus&lang=en Breed data sheet: Aberdeen-Angus / United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Cattle)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210917200114/https://fao-dadis-breed-detail.web.app/?country=GBR&specie=Cattle&breed=Aberdeen-Angus&lang=en |date=17 September 2021 }}. Domestic Animal Diversity Information System of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Accessed September 2021.</ref>
<ref name=dad>[https://dadis-breed-datasheet-ws.firebaseapp.com/?country=GBR&specie=Cattle&breed=Aberdeen-Angus&external=1&lang=en Breed data sheet: Aberdeen-Angus / United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (Cattle)]. Domestic Animal Diversity Information System of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Accessed September 2025.</ref>
 
<ref name=fuk>[s.n.] (28 June 2019). [https://web.archive.org/web/20190629111130/https://www.farminguk.com/news/aberdeen-angus-set-to-be-uk-s-most-popular-beef-breed_53333.html Aberdeen Angus set to be UK's most popular beef breed] (press release). ''Farming UK''. Archived 29 June 2019.</ref>


<ref name=james>James MacDonald, James Sinclair (1910). [https://archive.org/details/cu31924002957391/page/n9/mode/2up ''History of Aberdeen-Angus Cattle'']. London: Vinton & Company.</ref>
<ref name=james>James MacDonald, James Sinclair (1910). [https://archive.org/details/cu31924002957391/page/n9/mode/2up ''History of Aberdeen-Angus Cattle'']. London: Vinton & Company.</ref>


<ref name=nsw>[https://web.archive.org/web/20150624204743/http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/agriculture/livestock/beef/breeding/breeds/angus Angus cattle]. =New South Wales Agriculture. Archived 24 June 2015.</ref>
<ref name=nsw>Bruce Mackay (1 October 1997). [https://web.archive.org/web/20150624204743/http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/agriculture/livestock/beef/breeding/breeds/angus Cattle breeds: Angus] (Agfact A2.3.7, third edition). New South Wales Government: Department of Primary Industries. Archived 24 June 2015.</ref>
 
<ref name=osu>{{cite web|url=http://www.ansi.okstate.edu/breeds/cattle/redangus/|title=Oklahoma State University Red Angus breed profile}}</ref>


<ref name=rbst>[https://www.rbst.org.uk/native-aberdeen-angus2 Native Aberdeen Angus]. Kenilworth, Warwickshire: Rare Breeds Survival Trust. Accessed September 2021.</ref>
<ref name=rbst>[https://www.rbst.org.uk/native-aberdeen-angus2 Native Aberdeen Angus]. Kenilworth, Warwickshire: Rare Breeds Survival Trust. Accessed September 2021.</ref>

Latest revision as of 14:32, 11 November 2025

Template:Short description Script error: No such module "redirect hatnote". Template:Pp-pc Template:Use British English Template:Use list-defined references Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox cattle breed

The Aberdeen Angus, sometimes simply Angus, is a Scottish breed of small beef cattle. It derives from cattle native to the counties of Aberdeen, Banff, Kincardine and Angus in north-eastern Scotland.Template:R In 2018 it accounted for over 17% of the beef production in the United Kingdom.Template:R

The Angus is naturally polled and solid black or red;Template:R the udder may be white.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The cattle have been exported to many countries of the world; there are large populations in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South America and the United States,Template:R where it has developed into two separate and distinct breeds, the American Angus and the Red Angus.Template:R In some countries it has been bred to be taller than the native Scottish stock.Template:R

Its conservation status worldwide is "not at risk";Template:R in the United Kingdom the original Native Aberdeen Angus – cattle not influenced by cross-breeding with imported stock – is listed by the Rare Breeds Survival Trust as "at risk".Template:R

History

black-and-white print of a large bull with pendent scrotum
Historic salt print of a bull at an agricultural fair in Paris in 1856

For some time before the 1800s, the hornless cattle in Angus were called "Angus Doddies", while those in the historic province of Buchan (later part of Aberdeenshire) were known as "Buchan Humlies",Template:R both "doddie" and "humlie" meaning “polled”.Template:R

In 1824, William McCombie of Tillyfour, later the Member of Parliament for West Aberdeenshire, began to improve the stock and is regarded today as the father of the breed.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

The breed was officially recognised in 1835, and was initially registered together with the Galloway in the Polled Herd Book.Template:R A breed society was formed in 1879.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". The cattle became commonplace throughout the British Isles in the mid-twentieth century.[1]

Argentina

As stated in the fourth volume of the Herd Book of the UK's Angus, this breed was introduced to Argentina in 1879 when "Don Carlos Guerrero" imported one bull and two cows for his Estancia "Charles" located in Juancho, Partido de General Madariaga, Provincia de Buenos Aires. The bull was born on 19 April 1878; named "Virtuoso 1626" and raised by Colonel Ferguson. The cows were named "Aunt Lee 4697" raised by J. James and "Cinderela 4968" raised by R. Walker and were both born in 1878, on 31 January and 23 April respectively.[2]

Australia

black-and-white photograph of a row of small black bulls, each held on a halter
Judging bulls at the Royal Sydney Easter Show of 1935

Angus cattle were first introduced to Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania) in the 1820s, and to the southern mainland in 1840. The breed is now found in all Australian states and territories with Script error: No such module "val". calves registered with Angus Australia in 2010.[3]

Canada

In 1876 William Brown, a professor of agriculture and then superintendent of the experimental farm at Guelph, Ontario, was granted permission by the government of Ontario to purchase Aberdeen Angus cattle for the Ontario Agricultural College. The herd comprised a yearling bull, Gladiolus, and a cow, Eyebright, bred by the Earl of Fife and a cow, Leochel Lass 4th, bred by R.O. Farquharson. On 12 January 1877, Eyebright gave birth to a calf, sired by Sir Wilfrid. It was the first to be born outside of Scotland. The OAC went on to import additional bulls and cows, eventually began selling Aberdeen Angus cattle in 1881.[4]

United States

On 17 May 1873, George Grant brought four Angus bulls, without any cows, to Victoria, Kansas. These were seen as unusual as the normal American cattle consisted of Shorthorns and Longhorns, and the bulls were used only in crossbreeding. However, the farmers noticed the good qualities of these bulls, and afterwards many more cattle of both sexes were imported.[5]

On 21 November 1883, the American Angus Association was founded in Chicago, Illinois.[6] The first herd book was published in March 1885.[5] At this time both red and black animals were registered without distinction. However, in 1917 the Association barred the registering of red and other coloured animals in an effort to promote a solid black breed.[7]

The Red Angus Association of America was founded in 1954 by breeders of Red Angus cattle. It was formed because the breeders had had their cattle struck off the herd book for not conforming to the changed breed standard regarding colour.[7]

Germany

A separate breed was cross bred in Germany called the German Angus. It is a cross between the Angus and several different cattle such as the German Black Pied Cattle, Gelbvieh, and Fleckvieh. The cattle are usually larger than the Angus and appear in black and red colours.[8]

Characteristics

Black cattle grazing on green grass against a misty background
At pasture in West Tullyfergus, near Blairgowrie and Rattray in Perth and Kinross

Because of their native environment, the cattle are very hardy and can survive the Scottish winters, which are often harsh, with snowfall and storms. Cows weigh about Script error: No such module "convert". and bulls some Script error: No such module "convert"..Template:R Bulls may be used on dairy cows to produce a beef calf.Template:R The cattle are naturally polled and may be either black or red. They reach maturity earlier than some other native British breeds such as the Hereford or North Devon.

The cattle have a large muscle content and are regarded as medium-sized. In Japan the meat is prized for its marbling.Template:R

Among the recessive genetic defects that can affect the cattle are: arthrogryposis multiplex ("curly calf"); neuropathic hydrocephalus ("water head"); contractural arachnodactyly or "fawn calf syndrome"; dwarfism; osteoporosis; and notomelia.[9][10][11][12][13][14]

Use

The Aberdeen Angus is reared principally for beef. Bulls are used extensively as terminal sires on cows of other breeds – particularly dairy breeds – to produce cross-bred beef calves.Template:R The meat can be marketed as superior due to its marbled appearance.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".

Bulls can also be used to transmit characteristics including the polled gene (for ease of handling) and – with the aim of lowering the incidence of dystocia – the easy calving of cows.Template:R

Many modern breeds derive from the Aberdeen Angus or from its American derivatives, the American Angus and Red Angus of the United States. Among those created by cross-breeding are: the Murray Grey and Wokalup of Australia; the Ibagé (with Nelore) of Brazil; the Pee Wee of Canada; the Romosinuano (with Costeño con Cuernos) of Colombia; the Jamaica Black (with Brahman); the Japanese Polled (with indigenous Japanese cattle); the Afrigus (with Afrikaner) of South Africa;Template:R the Volynsk and Znamensk of Ukraine; and the Africangus (with Afrikaner), the Amerifax (with Beef Friesian), the Barzona (with Afrikaner, Hereford and Santa Gertrudis), the Brangus (with Brahman), the Holgus (with Holstein) and the Regus (Red Angus × Hereford) of the United StatesTemplate:R The Australian Lowline is not a cross-breed but the unexpected result of a research experiment using only Aberdeen Angus stock.Template:R

References

Template:Sister project

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  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Historia de la Cabaña Charles de Guerrero, criadora de Angus desde 1879 Template:Webarchive
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  9. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  10. Vidler, Adam, Defects on rise as gene pool drains, p. 63, The Land, Rural Press, North Richmond, NSW
  11. Another genetic defect affects Angus cattle Retrieved on 29 May
  12. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
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