D6-Lancast«r Fanning, Saturday, April 30, 1994 GEORGE F.W. HAENLEIN Extension Dairy Specialist University of Delaware NEWARK, Del. Have you heard of the ram effect? I don’t mean the Dodge Ram, nor do I mean using a battering ram to force down castle gates. It’s much more subtle, much more sophisticated: it’s something you can smell. Rather, it’s something certain animals can smell. If people could smell this “effect,” life would be easier. People can smell Christian Dior fragrances on other people and usually find !a certain pleasure in it. But those odors are fairly strong. As for animals, much smaller amounts of very specific kinds of smells seem to have an equally pleasant effect. In fact, these smells send messages, messages that somebody is receptive to physical approach or the reverse that this is somebody’s territ ory and you are off limits. The scientific name for these odor messages is pheromone, a powerful communicator among animals. If people could master, as Dr. Doolittle did, what the “language” means and when it occurs, animal management would be much easier. Actually, the chemical industry has begun to identify some of these communicator pheromones. Some companies now produce pheromones commercially as bait to lure certain insects to an artifi cial “love” trap or to aid pig far mers in waking up “sleepy” sows and get them more interested in service by a boar. Humans, however, are far from smelling either these megadoses of artificial imitations or the natur al subtle whiffs of communicating pheromones. This brings us to what has now become known in scientific termi nology as the “ram effect.” Dairy Expert Smells Work To Be Done It’s a subtle odor that works on ewes to stimulate their ovaries and to aid in better conception. Sheep breeders have long recognized the signs, not from smelling, but from observing flock behavior. Breeders have taken advantage of this phenomenon for greater breeding success and profit. Horse breeders know that you can’t just take a mare to a stallion for service one, two, three, zip, zip, it’s done. Instead, the mare is held on the other side of the fence for some time, maybe an hour or more, to stimulate the stallion at the sight of her and to stimulate him with the odor signals that the mare is ovulating and ready for service. This practice also stimulates the mare into better receptivity. In the wild, these pheromone signals are important for propaga tion of the species. The two sexes communicate to ensure success for the effort of finding each other. They economize their effort so as not to waste it on animals that aren’t ovulating nor ready to conceive. How docs this fit into dairy cattle management? Well, we have coined the term “silent estrus,” which means peo ple can’t tell from smell when a dairy cow is in estrus. Our noses are incapable of receiving the pheromone signals. The bull, however, has no prob lem sorting out and interpreting the smells. Scientific literature is full of studies trying to find alternative signals in cow behavior to help us identify cows in estrus. We look for restlessness, we put pedome ters on the cows’ legs to tell differ ences in activity, we look for the mounting cow by putting pressure-color patches on their rumps. But many dairy farmers have retained a bull, a “ketch up” bull, to do the smelling for them and “ketch” those cows we’ve missed. SSB. BINS AND AUGERS It’s high time we add a new name to our vocabulary of techni cal terms: “bull effect!” This would help us focus on our inabili ty so far to duplicate the effect of bull l?ehavior and smelling for more successful dairy cow conception. We bemoan the long time it takes many dairy farmers to get their cows pregnant again after the last calving, and we have made no headway in this area in recent years. Despite all kinds of modem technology, we are still missing the “bull effect.” A very interesting new study at the USDA Sheep Experiment Sta tion in Idaho (Journal of Animal LIONVILLE (Chester Co.) Hollis D. Baker, county executive director of the Chester/Delaware County Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS), says farmers who use premeasurement service before planting their spring crops will be paranteed that their field sizes are accurate for the 1994 program Dekalb Signs Agreement To Produce, Market Stock DEKALB, 111. Dekalb Swine Breeders, Inc. said that it has signed an agreement with United Grain Growers Limited of Win nepeg, Manitoba that allows the Canadian company to produce and to market certain commercial lines of swine breeding stock through its Unipork Genetics business unit. Under the agreement. United Grain Growers has production, distribution, marketing and trade mark rights to JSR Healthbred MMM m M> JmwLWF V Vm > y Take ’em Down! We Will Assemble & Deliver Bins To Your Farm Authorized Master Distributor Since 1982 IS m mm Northeast Agri Systems, Inc. Flyway Business Park store hours Mon -Fn 7 30 to 4 30 1 39 A West Airport Road Sat 8 OO to Noon Utltz, PA 17543 24 Hr f * e P°' r Ph (717)569-2702 1-800-673-2580 SCS Recommends Premeasurement year. “Premeasuring assures fanners that they are in compliance with the acreage reduction require ments,” said Baker, “and elimi nates the worry over loss of prog ram benefits.” Before crop planting time. ASCS will stake and measure any type of acreage, or portions there- commercial lines in the western Canadian provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatche wan, and Manitoba. United Grain Growers will pro duce parent stock boars and gilts that will be marketed under the JSR “Meatpacker" and “Gene packer” trademarks. United Grain Growers will not use the JSR breeding stock in genetic research activities, said Roy Poage, president of Dekalb Swine Breeders, a subsidiary of Dekalb Genetics Corporation. We Stock Truckloads Of Chore-Time Bins & Miles Of Chore-Time FLEX-AUGER Bins... Large Or Small Science 1994 (72) :51-55) indi cates that pheromones produced by the wax and wool of rams arc not the only inducements to ovula tion in anovular ewes. The level and degree of sexual behavior of the ram is also impor tant in initialing ovarian cycle activity as well. Two types of rams were com pared, low level vs. high level sex ual performance, libido; that is, more courtship and more time spent with the ewes. The efforts paid off in earlier and higher hormone levels in the ewes and ovulation occurred in 98 percent of ewes penned with high level rams vs. only 78 percent in ewes with low level rams. It has even been shown that ewes in anestrus were even stimu lated to come into estrus. For dairy cattle breeding this means that pheromones in detect ing cows in estrus or stimulating them into estrus have not been explored and exploited yet. And the complementary impor tance of bull behavior for exploit ing the “bull effect” for better ovu lation and conception rates has not been translated from the empirical states of “ketch up” bulls to a more profitable systematic inclu sion in routine, quick artificial insemination techniques for better success in dairy cattle management. of, that a farmer requests. To be assured that acreage reduction requirements are met, farmers must plant within the stakes that are placed when the land is premeasured. ASCS is conducting sign-up for the 1994 farm programs. Program participants are required to report actual planted crops and other acreage to be eligible for price support loans, target prices, and other program benefits. “Premeasurement is important in helping producers plan which land to devote to the ACR and which fields to plant,” the ASCS official said. The service costs $2O plus acres measured and includes measuring, referencing, and mark ing fields with stakes prior to planting. To schedule premeasurement and other producer service, far mers should contact the Chester/ Delaware County ASCS office at 71 W. Uwchlan Ave., Suite 130, Lionville, PA 19341-3011 (610) 363-1626. Put ’em Up! Custom Applications FOR FREE ESTIMATES CALL OUR TOLL-FREE CUSTOMER SERVICE NUMBER: 1-800-673-2580