Sunday, 18 July 2021

Is "breeding-back" necessary?

Originally, “breeding-back” as it was invented by the Heck brothers, aimed to recreate extinct species. We now know that this is not possible working with domestic descendants only, as the subject is much more complicated than just uniting visible traits found in primitive breeds. Therefore, the goal of “breeding-back” changed. Nowadays the main purpose of this method is to authentically replace the extinct wildtypes in the wild, filling the empty ecologic niche. In order to accomplish that, the set of criteria now also includes ecologic traits. The cattle (or horses, if there were “breeding-back” projects for horses) not only have to look like their extinct wildtype, but they also have to be capable of surviving in nature. Achieving that is not a big problem, was most primitive breeds already are very hardy landraces. 

But is “breeding-back” really necessary to fill the ecologic gap? 

 

For this question, the answer is pretty clear: no, it is not necessary. Releasing a couple of hardy landraces back into the wild would do the job as well, no elaborate selection on wildtype traits is actually necessary for these animals to survive in nature. While it is true that large, long-legged, athletic cattle with large horns will have a much easier time to defend themselves against predators than small, short-legged cattle without horns, natural selection will probably enforce wildtype traits anyway. Also, many landraces are already quite aurochs-like, such as Sayaguesa for example. They are large, have a comparably aurochs-like morphology and horns, and the colour is right as well (except for the very reduced sexual dichromatism). Add Maronesa genes by releasing both breeds in the same area and most aurochs fans will be satisfied. The same goes for Spanish fighting cattle (Lidia). The probability that they survive in nature and function like their extinct ancestor is very high, as there are feral cattle populations that descended from derived breeds that were not landraces (such as on the Ile Amsterdam or New Zealand). So just releasing a number of cattle from several primitive landraces and letting them breed for themselves and do their thing in natural areas will do the job sufficiently in any case. I have the suspicion that this is the plan the Tauros Programme. So far, they have done exactly that and nothing more (at least nothing that they have published). 

 

If that is the case, why doing “breeding-back” in that intensity at all? I see three main reasons: 

- to see how much similarity to the extinct wildtype can be achieved by selective breeding 

- educational purpose: by showing what an aurochs (or European wild horse) looked like and was like you educate people zoologically 

- a homogeneously wildtype-like phenotype is important for the public acceptance as a wild animal. If the cattle are heterogeneous in appearance they would look more like a bunch of escaped farm cattle, while the phenotype of the aurochs was undoubtedly that of a wild animal. There are indeed people who are against using cattle (or horses) in rewilding because they consider it animal cruelty to let domestic animals live in the wild. It is thus important for the public acceptance of the projects to communicate these are “special” animals bred to live in the wild. 

 

So from a purely ecological point of view “breeding-back” is not necessary. But having a breed of cattle that is as aurochs-like as possible certainly has some advantages. In the end, it is about authenticity. An authentic proxy for the aurochs is more satisfying for nature lovers, has a higher chance of being accepted as a wild animal in the public eye, is more educative, and probably has a higher ecologic fitness compared to randomly chosen landraces due to the selective advantages a wildtype-like phenotype likely has. It is also a matter of opinion. Surely there are more pragmatic people that do not care that much about authenticity, but there are also (perhaps more idealistic) people that do want to replace the aurochs as authentically as possible. And there is enough of the latter category that there are “breeding-back” projects, and even several of them. 


5 comments:

  1. Ciao Daniel. After seeing this video
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MFYLTZH6fVo
    I don’t know if, from a purely ecological point of view, “breeding-back” is not so necessary…
    The bulls in the video are from Lippeaue. They can be considered the “top level” breeding back selection. A simple, small konick stallion, half of the bull’s weight and without horns, chases not only the main bull but all the herd!!! How can this be possible??? It is frankly embarrassing…In terms of intraspecific selection it means that the probability that cattle can survive in nature and function like their extinct ancestor is very high but only and only if there are no horses in a real intraspecific competition. Where there are horses and not so much food (like in Oostvvaarderplassen) this video shows that they can not survive easily… The same, maybe, with big red deers.. Maybe the horse is too smart (and that means that the 30% brain reduction of domestic cattle is a really serious problem in this case), maybe the Taurus bulls are too shy. In any case maybe a serious backbreeding selection with breeds without the brain reduction and with a wilder character (like Lidia or Heringer cattle) has to be, in my opinion, reconsidered.

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    1. Horses are dominant over cattle of any breed, that phenomenon is not unique to Taurus cattle. There was only one exception, the Sayaguesa cow Dona-Urraca in the Lippeuae, which was dominant over the horses. I wouldn't worry about that.

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    2. Ciao Daniel,
      it is surely as you said in moder cattle but there are some exceptions that made me think that horses were not so easily dominant over a wild auroch. In my italian region (Aosta Valley) we have Heringer fighting cows (castana valdostana) for the "bataille des reines" and horses pay much, much more attention to the cows. Not so easy to steal their food... I think that also a spanish fighting bull is not so easily dominable by a simple Konick pony...

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  2. pardon... I wrote "intraspecific selection" but the correct term is interspecific selection

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  3. This is, in my opinion, one of the most interesting articles on this blog.
    I think that should be pointed what we exactly mean by "release into the wild". Wherever in Europe we release cattle, it would not be a true "wild" place. I mean: streets,road and infrastructures will interfere with animal movement and migration, in both geographical and chronological sense; frequent contact with human can interfere with behavior; predators presence would make a big difference.
    It wouldn't be the same to release cattle in England or Carpathian region, in north Germany or southerners Italian mountain. A well selected wildtype cattle could enhance their chance to survive over all environmental condition. Furthermore I think than not all the so called landrace are suitable the same for each place and, lookig for a long term future, mankind could in the next decades plan larger protected, wild areas even in Europe, where conditions will be different from today. In that case we will spare time only if we will have at least one well selected wildtype cattle

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