The history of French cattle breeding is the result of the intermingling of bovine populations from several European offshoots, after centuries of breeding and selection practices. The French herd includes crosses with zebus (Bos taurus indicus) in the French overseas departments and territories.
In 2010, the French cattle population numbered 19.3 million head. [1]
Cows in production represented 7.7 million head (4.2 suckling and 3.5 dairy), and milk production in 2005 was 239 million hectolitres.
The domestication of Bos taurus is thought to have taken place in the Fertile Crescent. [2] From then on, cattle accompanied peoples on their migrations. According to Philippe J. Dubois, the bovine species arrived in Europe via three routes: from the Danube, from the shores of the Mediterranean, and from North Africa via the Strait of Gibraltar. Studies have not revealed any interbreeding between these domesticated cattle and their wild ancestor, the Aurochs. [3]
Some breeds, such as the Camargue [4] and Corsican, may have lived in their territory for a very long time. [5]
Numerous branches have appeared with the great population movements since Antiquity: [6]
From these elements, each region, and even each mountain valley, has selected a breed that corresponds to its needs and the difficulties of its terroir (climate and soil).
Cattle breeding has always had several economic interests: the supply of milk (formerly destined mainly for cheese and butter production), meat and leather. In regions where heavy draft horses were not available, this function was delegated to work oxen or robust cows (south-west, Massif Central, Alps, etc.).
Selection work began in the abbeys. The work of the monks is not lost between generations. The Aubrac [13] and Abondance [14] breeds are of monastic origin.
With the enclosure movement, wealthy British landowners began to take an interest in the profitability of their livestock from the 18th century onwards. Around 1760, Robert Bakewell, a British breeder, began to select cattle, sheep and horses through inbreeding and feed improvement. He greatly improved the performance of what would become the longhorn breed. In 1785, the Colling brothers applied the same methods to the future shorthorn. This easy-to-fatten breed was to become a sensation in Europe. [15] In Switzerland, in 1775, the first herd-book was created for the mountain gray breed of the territorial abbey of Einsiedeln. [16]
Until the beginning of the 20th century, farmers paid little attention to the selection of their livestock, as long as they could survive. It was not until the 19th century, under the influence of England, that owners began to select animals to improve their performance. Most of today's cattle breeds were born at this time, and are the result of crossbreeding and genetic research, to obtain versatile (working breed, milk and meat producer) or specialized animals. From the outset, the Shorthorn breed spread rapidly throughout the world, particularly in France from 1830 onwards, where it became the benchmark cow for some thirty years. [17]
The introduction of agricultural shows by the Minister of Trade and Agriculture Adolphe Thiers (1833) and breeding competitions (1850) contributed to this improvement in livestock numbers. [18]
Three phenomena took place:
In 1945, France had a food deficit. The political authorities encouraged productivity and the modernization of agriculture. The ideal scheme envisaged by some boiled down to a dairy bree d, the French Frisonne Pie Noir, and a beef breed, the Charolais.
This project underwent a number of adjustments designed to obtain well-adapted regional breeds. The Montbéliarde and Limousin breeds, which are highly efficient in their local environment, are favored. Blondes from the southwest were merged into the new Blonde d'Aquitaine breed, while Mirandaise was absorbed into Gasconne and Armoricaine into Pie Rouge des Plaines. The aim remains to keep a core of highly profitable breeds and to encourage artificial insemination: the less profitable "old breeds" are thus diluted and disappear.
This work of selecting the most productive breeds was quickly recognized abroad. At the same time, cholesterol was discovered to be present in beef. Breeds selected for work under the yoke had a much lower level of cholesterol, and it was the French breeds that produced the highest yields.
However, a few grains of sand were to disrupt this well-oiled machine.
A number of breeds disappeared during this reorganization of agriculture.
Today, France has a considerable number of breeds. This genetic variability is further accentuated by the fact that almost all European branches are represented.
France is recognized as a major cheese-producing country, and its lean meat breeds are in great demand, leading to the export of breeding stock to every continent. It's worth noting that, for several branches of European breeds, French breeds are the most efficient:
In the European Union, calves under 8 weeks of age can be kept in very small individual cages. The Compassion in World Farming association is opposed to this practice: "These young calves have already been taken from their mothers at birth, usually at the age of one day, after the first colostrum feedings. Already stressed by maternal separation, they need contact with other calves". [20]
The Charolais or Charolaise is a French breed of taurine beef cattle. It originates in, and is named for, the Charolais area surrounding Charolles, in the Saône-et-Loire department, in the Bourgogne-Franche-Comté region of eastern France.
The Simmental or Swiss Fleckvieh is a Swiss breed of dual-purpose cattle. It is named after the Simmental – the valley of the Simme river – in the Bernese Oberland, in the canton of Bern in Switzerland. It is reddish in colour with white markings, and is raised for both milk and meat.
The Limousin, French: Limousine, is a French breed of beef cattle from the Limousin and Marche regions of France. It was formerly used mainly as a draught animal, but in modern times is reared for beef. A herd-book was established in France in 1886. With the mechanisation of agriculture in the twentieth century, numbers declined. In the 1960s there were still more than 250 000 head, but the future of the breed was not clear; it was proposed that it be merged with the other blonde draught breeds of south-western France – the Blonde des Pyrénées, the Blonde de Quercy and the Garonnaise – to form the new Blonde d'Aquitaine. Instead, a breeders' association was formed; new importance was given to extensive management, to performance recording and to exports. In the twenty-first century the Limousin is the second-most numerous beef breed in France after the Charolais. It is a world breed, raised in about eighty countries round the world, many of which have breed associations.
The Salers is a breed of cattle which originated in Cantal in the Massif Central of France.
The Beef Shorthorn breed of cattle was developed from the Shorthorn breed in England and Scotland around 1820. The Shorthorn was originally developed as a dual-purpose breed, suitable for both dairy and beef production. However, different breeders opted to concentrate on one purpose rather than the other, and in 1958, the beef breeders started their own section of the herdbook. Since then, the Beef Shorthorns have been developed as a separate breed to the Dairy Shorthorns.
The Blonde d'Aquitaine is a modern French breed of large domestic beef cattle. It was created in 1962 by merging three blonde draught breeds of south-western France, the Blonde des Pyrénées, the Blonde de Quercy and the Garonnaise. Since about 1970, it has been selectively bred specifically for beef production. It is the third-most numerous beef breed of France, after the Charolais and the Limousin. It has been exported to many countries round the world.
The Normande is a breed of dairy cattle from the Normandy region of north-west France. It is raised principally for its milk, which is high in fat and suitable for making butter and cheese, but also for its meat, which is marbled and good-flavoured. It is a world breed: it has been exported to many countries and is present on all continents.
The Lourdaise is an endangered French breed of domestic cattle. It is named for the town of Lourdes, in the Hautes-Pyrénées département of the region of Occitanie, and originated in the surrounding country, particularly in the cantons of Argelès, Bagnères-de-Bigorre and Ossun. It was formerly a triple-purpose breed, kept for its milk, for its meat and for draught work. It was widely distributed in the Pyrénées of south-western France. It came close to extinction in the 1980s, but has since recovered following conservation efforts. It remains critically endangered.
The Armoricaine or Armorican is an endangered French breed of domestic cattle. It originated in Brittany in the nineteenth century. It has a red coat with white markings, and has short horns.
The Froment du Léon is an endangered French breed of dairy cattle from the coastal region of northern Brittany, in the north-west of France. It is named for the historic Viscounty of Léon, in the départements of Côtes-d'Armor and Finistère in the extreme north-west of Brittany. It is valued for the quality of its milk, which is yellow and high in fat, and is particularly suitable for making into butter.
The Pie Rouge des Plaines is a modern French breed of dairy cattle. It was created in about 1970 by cross-breeding the traditional Armorican cattle of Brittany, in north-western France, with red-pied cattle of the Dutch Meuse-Rhine-Yssel and German Deutsche Rotbunte breeds.
French Simmental is a French cattle breed.
The Parthenaise is a French breed of beef cattle. It is named for the town of Parthenay in the département of Deux-Sèvres, in the Nouvelle-Aquitaine region of western France. It was formerly a triple-purpose breed, raised for milk, meat and draught work, but is now raised mainly for beef.
The Camargue is a breed of domestic cattle native to the Camargue marshlands of the river delta of the Rhône in southern France. It is used for the traditional sport of course camarguaise, a kind of bloodless bull-fight, but not for the corrida, Iberian-style bull-fighting. It is one of two cattle breeds raised in semi-feral conditions in the Camargue; the other is the Brava or Race de Combat, a fighting breed. Since 1996 it has been officially known as the Provençal: Raço di Biòu.
The Ferrandaise is an endangered French breed of domestic cattle from the département of Puy-de-Dôme, in the Massif Central mountains of Auvergne, in central France. It is named for the city and commune of Clermont-Ferrand, the capital of Puy-de-Dôme.
The Béarnaise is a French breed of domestic beef cattle. It originates in the area of the traditional province of Béarn, in the east of the département of Pyrénées-Atlantiques, in the northern Pyrénées in south-west France. It was merged with other breeds in 1920 to form the Blonde des Pyrénées, which in turn was fused with the Blonde de Quercy and Garonnaise breeds to create the Blonde d'Aquitaine in 1962.
The Bleue du Nord is a French breed of dual-purpose cattle from the former region of Nord-Pas-de-Calais in the north-east of the country, on the border with Belgium. It shares the origins of the Belgian Blue, but unlike that breed is selectively bred both for meat and for dairy use. The double-muscling characteristic of the Belgian Blue, caused by a genetic myostatin deficiency, is present also in the Bleue du Nord, but to a limited and controlled extent.
The Brava or Race de Combat is a French breed of domestic cattle raised in the Camargue, the delta of the Rhône in southern France. It is bred specifically for bull-fighting, either Spanish-style or Portuguese-style. It is one of two cattle breeds raised in semi-feral conditions in the Camargue: the other is the Raço di Biòu or Camargue breed, which is not a fighting breed but is used in a bloodless bull-sport, the course camarguaise. The Brava derives from Iberian fighting cattle imported in the nineteenth century, and may also be known as the Espagnole Brava.
The Villard-de-Lans, or villarde, is a French cattle breed native to the outskirts of the homonymous town in the Vercors mountain pass within the French Prealps. This wheat-colored cow was for many years used for agricultural labor, milking and meat production, before World War II and the industrialization of cattle breeds led to its decline.
The Marine Landaise is a French bovine breed with a very small population, benefiting from a conservation program and maintained in humid natural areas along the coast of the Landes de Gascogne, in the Landes and Gironde regions. Its vocation is environmental. It should not be confused with the Spanish fighting bull used courses landaises.