An attempt to correlate cattle breed origins and diseases associated with or transmitted by the tick Amblyomma variegatum in the French West Indies
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.19182/remvt.9380Keywords
Cattle, Bacterioses, Dermatophilus, Ixodidae, Amblyomma variegatum, Disease resistance, Guadeloupe, MartiniqueAbstract
By using biological data and historical research, we have tried to explain the difference between resistance and susceptibility to the diseases transmitted (cowdriosis) or associated (dermatophilosis) with the tick Amblyomma variegatum, in two cattle breeds of the French West Indies: the Creole crossbred cattle of Guadeloupe and the Brahman zebu cattle of Martinique. Have been studied the polymorphisms of 5 independent genetic systems (erythrocytic haemoglobin, serum albumin and transferrin, the class 1 region of the BoLA complex and the gamma S crystallin gene) in different breeds comprising Bos taurus cattle of Europe and Africa, Bos indicus of West and East Africa, as well as the Brahman of Martinique and the Creole crossbred of Guadeloupe. By comparing the different allele frequencies of these 5 non related polymorphic loti and by using the two different mathematical matrices of NEI and of CAVALLI-SFORZA, have been established the genetic distances between these breeds. It appears clearly that the Creole cattle of Guadeloupe are in an intermediate position between the Bos taurus N’Dama breed of West Africa and two Bos indicus zebu breeds, namely the West African Sudan zebu and the Brahman. Thanks to studies of different archives in the Caribbean and in Europe, historical evidence have been accumulated on the geographical origins and on the chronology of the establishment of Creole and Brahman cattle in the French West Indies. The high resistance of the Creole cattle of Guadeloupe to diseases associated with or transmitted by the “Senegalese” tick Amblyomma variegatum seems to be due to the inheritance of a pool of genes from West African cattle and more particularly from the N’Dama breed. Indeed, the tick Amblyomma variegatum, endemic in all West Africa, was introduced in the Caribbean with West African cattle. Most certainly, this tick maintained a parasitic pressure, hence the innate capability of the Creole cattle to naturally control these diseases.
Downloads
Downloads
-
Abstract239
-
PDF140
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
© J.C.Maillard et al., hosted by CIRAD 1993
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.