Jm. Wilson et al., COMPARISON OF BIRTH-WEIGHT AND GROWTH-CHARACTERISTICS OF BOVINE CALVES PRODUCED BY NUCLEAR TRANSFER (CLONING), EMBRYO-TRANSFER AND NATURAL MATING, Animal reproduction science, 38(1-2), 1995, pp. 73-83
Data presented in this study compare weight (kg) at birth, and at 205
(weaning) and 365 (yearling) days of age for bovine calves produced fr
om nuclear transfer (CLONE), embryo transfer (ET), and artificial inse
mination/natural mating (AI/NM). Birth weight data, for three consecut
ive years, include 418 CLONE, 4687 ET and 8925 AI/NM calves. Additiona
lly, data for (219 CLONE, 2515 ET and 3895 AI/NM) weaning and (66 CLON
E, 1250 ET and 1630 AI/NM) yearling weights were analyzed. Calves prod
uced by CLONE were grown and maintained with calves produced by ET and
AI/NM. CLONE calves were approximately 20% larger at birth than calve
s produced by ET or AI/NM when all data were compared and when data we
re adjusted for sire or for sire and dam. Moreover, the variability in
birth weight for CLONE calves was four- to 12-fold greater than for E
T or AI/NM calves. The accelerated growth and variability did not cont
inue beyond birth. The 205 day and 365 day weights of CLONE calves wer
e less variable than their birth weight and were similar to those for
ET and AI/NM calves. Differences between weight for CLONE, ET and AI/N
M calves when measured as a percent of body weight declined from appro
ximately 24% at birth to < 5% at 365 days.