Why do cows have spots genetics?

Why do cows have spots genetics?

Introduction to Genetics

Vocabulary continued Mendel's experiments led him to believe that there were two copies of every gene. With our current understanding of chromosomes this makes sense but it was puzzling to his contemporaries. This next group of terms share in common that we need to think about two copies of each gene.

Allele Alleles are variations of a gene. For this week's lab we start with a consideration of the coat color gene in cattle. We will discuss two variations of the coat color gene: red and black. The red allele is responsible for red coat color and the black allele causes black coat color. We mostly use letters as an abbreviation for alleles, B = black, b = red.
Homozygous An individual that contains two copies of the same allele for a specific gene is homozygous. Heterozygous An individual that contains two different alleles of a gene is heterozygous.
Examples A cow that has two alleles for a red coat is homozygous (bb). A bull with two alleles for a black coat is homozygous (BB). A calf that has one allele for red coat color and one allele for black coat color is heterozygous (Bb).

Heterozygous individuals contain two different alleles which results in conflicting instructions. One gene says "black coat" while the other says "red coat". What will the result be?

Dominant allele The allele that is seen (or expressed) in a heterozygote is said to be dominant. We usually use a capital letter to indicate dominance (B). Recessive allele The allele that is hidden (or suppressed) in a heterozygote is said to be recessive. We usually use a lower case letter to indicate recessiveness (b).
Examples A heterozygous calf has one red allele and one black allele (Bb). These animals are always black. This tells you that the black allele is dominant and the red allele is recessive because the black coloration is hiding the red. We use "B" to indicate the dominant black allele and "b" for the recessive red allele.

If you happen upon a stray calf in the middle of the road it is pretty easy to figure out the color the animal but can you determine the alleles that it carries?

Phenotype The appearance of an animal (or any other form of life) is considered its phenotype (think ph = physical). Genotype An animal's genotype is its genetic make-up (think gen = genetic).
Examples Black is the phenotype of a calf with at least one black (B) allele. Red is the phenotype of a calf with two red (bb) alleles.
Two calves may be the same phenotype and yet be different genotypes. Cattle that are BB are black but so are animals that are Bb: Two different genotypes that have the same phenotype. What is the genotype of a calf that has a red phenotype?
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Species composition and environmental adaptation of indigenous Chinese cattle.

Gao Y, Gautier M, Ding X, Zhang H, Wang Y, Wang X, Faruque MO, Li J, Ye S, Gou X, Han J, Lenstra JA, Zhang Y. Gao Y, et al. Sci Rep. 2017 Nov 23;7(1):16196. doi: 10.1038/s41598-017-16438-7. Sci Rep. 2017. PMID: 29170422 Free PMC article.

Why do cows have spots genetics?
There are various theories to explain why animals come with a wide variety of patterns, colours, stripes and spots, such as for camouflage or to increase their appeal to potential mates.

Zen Faulkes, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Texan-Pan American, says another idea has been doing the research rounds this year: that spots help to repel flies.

In cows, at least, a mottled coat can trick horseflies into pestering another animal, the associate professor writes on his blogsite.

Earlier this year, scientists published a paper suggesting zebra stripes deterred biting flies.

The same team recently devised a study to test if spots on cows served a similar purpose.

To test the idea, the team set out boards painted with varying amounts of spots, but with the same proportion of black and white.

The boards were covered with glue, so if a fly landed on them, they would be stuck. That allowed the researchers to measure the attractiveness of the surface to flies.

The more smaller spots there were, the fewer flies they found on the board. They also shifted the orientations of the boards, but the results did not change.

The results were also replicated when they covered a realistic model of a cow in glue. Lots of small spots meant fewer flies were captured.

“What is going on here? The team suggest that this all happens because of one important fact about the flies: they lay their eggs in water,” Assoc Prof Faulkes writes.

“How do you get from that to cowhide? Like this:

“Flies lay their eggs in small pools of water, so they need to have reliable ways to detect bodies of water.

“Light reflected off water is polarized, and many insects, including these flies, can see polarized light.

“Thus, the flies have a built-in detection system for, and a preference to move to, polarized objects.

The dark fur of cattle polarizes light more than the white fur. (This is the one point in the study where the researchers used actual cows, not just painted models.)”

Flies are not just an irritation to cattle. Biting flies can seriously affect cattle health and performance, and can transmit disease.

Assoc Prof Faulkes said that besides possible agricultural applications, humans might take a few lessons from this research, since flies that bite cattle can just as easily bite humans.
 

Why do cows have spots genetics?
Longhorn cattle in Houston, Texas. dog.happy.art

Animals come with a wide variety of spots, colors, stripes and patterns. For each of these adaptations, there is certainly a reason, right? Maybe it’s for camouflage, or maybe they just want to look sexy for their friends.

Zen Faulkes, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Texan-Pan American, highlights a new idea for spots’ apparent purpose: bug repellant. In cows, at least, a mottled coat can trick horseflies into pestering someone else, says Faulkes says Faulkes.

Referencing two different studies, one looking at zebras and another for cows, Faulkes says that a cow’s spotted coat can confuse a horsefly’s vision, which is tuned to see polarized light. The dark and light spots of some cows change how polarized light is reflected.

The authors of the study on cows found “that the smaller and the more numerous the spots, the less attractive the target is to tabanids .”

This could be one of the possible evolutionary benefits that explains why spotty coat patterns are so widespread in mammals, especially in ungulates, many species of which are tabanid hosts.

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The “Cow Culture” of Switzerland’s Berner Oberland