
RARE BREEDS TRUST OF AUSTRALIA
powered by TidyHQCattle : Australian Friesian Sahiwal
Cattle : Australian Friesian Sahiwal
Country of Origin
Australia
Australian Status
LOST
Uses
Milk
Breed traits
A dairy breed that copes well with tropical conditions and has a high yield of milk. Some are black and white, others are red and black. Good fertility, resistance to ticks and tropical parasites. The milk is high in fat and protein. The cattle thrive well on basic forage, and have sound feet and legs. Low birth weight calves with less wide forehead and shoulders than pure Friesians make calving easier.
History
Developed by the Queensland Department of Agriculture from 1961 when a Sahiwal bull, a Bos indicus breed from Pakistan, was crossed with Holstein-Friesian cows. The aim was to create a dairy breed that coped with tropical conditions, as pure Bos indicus had a low milk yield and pure Bos taurus (Friesians in this case) often failed to conceive in hot conditions. The program was hugely successful thence the Australia Friesian Sahiwal (AFS). The milk yield is up to 80% of Friesians, conception and calving are successful and there is a far great tolerance to the heat. Over the development period of 30 years, the 50-50 ratio of the founding breeds was maintained.
To bring numbers up in the current era, a breeding program using Friesian cows put to AFS bulls is in place. The progeny are called F3. After 3 generations of such breeding they may enter the studbook as pure.
Organisation
Australian Friesian Sahiwal Dairy Society: website no longer in existance
More information available from Oklahoma State University: Australian Friesian Sahiwal Cattle
Australian Population
2022 None reported. Probably extinct.
Photo Credit
AFS cow, photo by JunaydAnwar, WikiMedia Commons
Page by Janet Lane.