As early as 1785, the Swiss Parliament limited exports because of a shortage of cattle to meet their own needs.
Their colors are red and white spotted or gold and white.
Simmental were reported as early as 1887 in Illinois, according to one source; in 1895 in New Jersey; and in both New York and New Mexico around the 1916 to 1920 period.
Today, about 80% of the Simmental cattle in the United States are black, with the remaining 20% being red.
1886 to ensure the breed's purity and improvement by only recording and breeding animals that satisfied a strictly enforced breed standard.
Their coat light wheat to darker golden-red. Black Limousins also bred.
The first Limousin herd book was then established in France in 1886 to ensure the breed's purity and improvement by only recording and breeding animals that satisfied a strictly enforced breed standard.
It is said that during the period from 1910 to 1920, many cattle in the south-western part of Texas and the coastal country along the Gulf of Mexico showed considerable evidence of Bos indicus breeding.
The Brangus breed was developed to the superior traits of Angus and Brahman cattle.
The effort to develop the Brangus breed began as early as 1912 and the first organization of Brangus breeders was chartered in 1949.
There are now members in nearly every state, Canada, Mexico, Australia, Central America, Argentina, and Zimbabwe in Africa.
The early breeders from 16 states and Canada met in Vinita, Oklahoma, on July 2, 1949.
The original American Brahman cattle originated from a nucleus of approximately 266 bulls and 22 females of several Bos indicus (cattle of India) varieties imported into the United States between 1854 and 1926.
Texas Longhorns with elite genetics can often fetch $40,000 or more at auction with the record of $170,000 in recent history for a cow.
Between 1493 and 1512, Spanish colonists brought additional cattle in subsequent expeditions.
Early US settlers in Texas obtained feral Mexican cattle from the borderland between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande and mixed them with their own eastern cattle.
The varieties of color ranged from bluish-grey, and various yellowish hues, to browns, black, ruddy and white, both cleanly bright and dirty-speckled.
Accidental crosses were noticed as long ago as 1749 in the southern English colonies of North America.
It was found early on that crossing a male bison with a domestic cow would produce few offspring, but that crossing a domestic bull with a bison cow apparently solved the problem.
In 1965, Jim Burnett of Montana produced a hybrid bull that was fertile.
The Beefalo can vary greatly in appearance but generally it has a large frame and is well muscled similar in stature to the Bison.
Beefalo calves are born small but grow very fast, cattle producers buy and breed Beefalo for the easier care of animals from weaned to sales auction market.
From 1635 to 1868, the cow herd in Japan was officially closed by mandate of the Shogun.
The original import of these cattle to the U.S. in 1976 consisted of two Tottori Black Wagyu and two Kumamoto Red Wagyu bulls.
That was the only importation of Wagyu into the U.S. until 1993 when two male and three female Tajima cattle were imported and 1994 when 35 male and female cattle consisting of both red and black genetics reached the U.S.
The word Wagyu refers to all Japanese beef cattle.
Cattle were first introduced into Japan in the 2nd century to provide power for the cultivation of rice.
Wagyu have a coat colour of black or red, their horns are straight to slightly curving forward and start off a whitish colour then darken to black at the end.
Color white or wheaten with grey shading; black skin and switch.
They are horned.
Until the late nineteenth century there were numerous local types of Piedmontese cattle, including the Canavese, the Della Langa, the Demonte, the Ordinario di Pianura and the Scelta di Pianura.
At the beginning of the twentieth century there were about 680,000 Piedmontese cattle in Italy; by 1985 this had fallen to about 600,000.[1] In 1957 the number registered in the herd-book was 851; by the end of 2011 it had risen to 267,243.
In 1978 the Belgian Blue cattle were introduced to the United States through a man by the name of Nick Tutt, a farmer from central Canada who immigrated to west Texas showing surrounding Universities of this cattle.
The condition was first documented in 1808 by a livestock observationist named George Culley.
The modern beef breed was developed in the 1950s by Professor Hanset, working at an artificial insemination centre in Liege province.