Belgian Blue: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Belgian Blue''' [[cattle]] are a heavily-bred breed, producing extraordinary amounts of meat. The sculpted, heavily muscled appearance is known as "doubled muscled", and is a trait shared by the [[Piedmontese cattle|Piedmontese breed]]. |
'''Belgian Blue''' [[cattle]] are a heavily-bred breed, producing extraordinary amounts of meat. The sculpted, heavily muscled appearance is known as "[[doubled muscled]]", and is a trait shared by the [[Piedmontese cattle|Piedmontese breed]]. |
||
Critics call Belgian blues "monster cows" and some countries do not allow them.{{citation needed}} They are often unable to give birth without [[caesarean section]]. |
Critics call Belgian blues "monster cows" and some countries do not allow them.{{citation needed}} They are often unable to give birth without [[caesarean section]]. |
||
Belgian blue has a natural mutation of the gene that codes for [[myostatin]], a protein that counteracts muscle growth. The truncated myostatin is unable to function in this capacity. This mutation also interferes with fat deposition, resulting in very lean meat. One human boy in Germany was born with the same mutation. The gene is referred to as "Mighty Mouse" and the boy has been called "superboy" by the press. |
Belgian blue has a natural mutation of the gene that codes for [[myostatin]], a protein that counteracts muscle growth. The truncated myostatin is unable to function in this capacity. This mutation also interferes with fat deposition, resulting in very lean meat. One human boy in Germany was born with the same mutation. The gene is referred to as "[[Mighty Mouse]]" and the boy has been called "[[superboy]]" by the press. |
||
==References== |
==References== |
Revision as of 00:59, 3 November 2006
Belgian Blue cattle are a heavily-bred breed, producing extraordinary amounts of meat. The sculpted, heavily muscled appearance is known as "doubled muscled", and is a trait shared by the Piedmontese breed.
Critics call Belgian blues "monster cows" and some countries do not allow them.[citation needed] They are often unable to give birth without caesarean section.
Belgian blue has a natural mutation of the gene that codes for myostatin, a protein that counteracts muscle growth. The truncated myostatin is unable to function in this capacity. This mutation also interferes with fat deposition, resulting in very lean meat. One human boy in Germany was born with the same mutation. The gene is referred to as "Mighty Mouse" and the boy has been called "superboy" by the press.
References
- Discover magazine, January 2005, "Secret of Superboy's Strength Revealed". [1]