Research into calving difficulty (dystocia) and stillbirth in both dairy and beef cattle, as reported during the last two decades, is reviewed with emphasis on causes and effects. The present concept of hormonal control of parturition is briefly outlined. Causes of dystocia and stillbirth and their relative contributions to the cases observed in field data, veterinary practise and obstetric clinics are discussed. Direct (loss of calf, death of dam, labour, veterinary assistance) and longer term (culling rate, milk yield, fertility) costs are summarized. After going briefly into difficulties encountered in heritability and correlation estimates and their interpretation when categorical data are involved, phenotypic relationships between calving performance and calf traits, dam traits and gestation length are dealt with extensively. The effects of non-genetic factors (parity, sex of calf, age at first calving, season, level of nutrition during gestation) and their supposed modes of action are reviewed. The genetic model for calving traits is outlined and the estimates for the components suggested to be involved (direct, maternal, direct-maternal interaction) are summarized. Three topics in sire evaluation for the direct genetic component are discussed extensively, viz. the possible contribution of traits of the sire (birth weight, gestation period, body dimensions, performance test results), the alternatives in choice of mates in progeny testing, and methods of evaluation (BLUP, non-linear models). Finally, alternative strategies in selection against dystocia are compared.
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