FREEMARTINS - AGRICULTURE

News: Freemartins: black sheep among the cattle

 

What's in the news?

       In agricultural settings, because freemartins can’t reproduce, farmers often identify them through physical or behavioural traits.

 

Freemartins:

       A freemartin is infertile female cattle with masculinized behaviour and non-functioning ovaries.

       Phenotypically, the animal appears female, but various aspects of female reproductive development are altered due to acquisition of anti-Müllerian hormone from the male twin.

       Genetically, the animal is chimeric - Karyotype of a sample of cells shows XX/XY chromosomes.

       The animal originates as a female (XX), but acquires the male (XY) component in utero by exchange of some cellular material from a male twin, via vascular connections between placentas - an example of micro chimerism.

       The chimerism is mainly present in the hematopoietic stem cells.

       Freemartins behave and grow in a similar way to castrated male cattle (steers).