Authors
Daniela Rodríguez-González, Antonio Humberto Hamad Minervino, Agustín Orihuela, Aldo Bertoni, Diego Armando Morales-Canela, Adolfo Álvarez-Macías, Nancy José-Pérez, Adriana Domínguez-Oliva, Daniel Mota-Rojas
Publication date
2022/2/28
Source
Animals
Volume
12
Issue
5
Pages
608
Publisher
MDPI
Description
Simple Summary
Buffalo is a domesticated large ruminant that can be raised for beef, dairy, and work. In some systems, these animals can be raised with a dual purpose (beef and dairy). The present review describes the characteristics of the dual-purpose water buffalo production system in Mexico’s humid wetlands. This article provides extensive information on the water buffalo and includes comparisons with other species to note similarities and differences. The aim is to describe the buffalo handling procedures used in this system, particularly during breeding, milking, confinement, and mobilization, relating them to the neurological processes involved and analyzing the productive results. Understanding these processes will allow us to obtain a more precise vision of the advantages that this species can offer, and the possible implications of the development of this type of livestock under tropical conditions.
Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to describe the characteristics of the dual-purpose water buffalo production based on the Mexican production system as a model in tropical wetlands. It includes a broad literature review emphasizing the most recent and specialized publications examining key findings to improve our understanding in the performance of the buffalo species (Bubalus bubalis). The complementary topics addressed include reproductive management, parturition, the dam–calf bond, milking routines, and models of confinement and management, in addition to aspects related to milk commercialization. This article summarizes the advances made to date in this production system and its current …
Total citations
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