Danish Jersey Explained

Danish Jersey
Also Known As:Dansk Jersey
Country:Denmark
Use:dairy
Maleweight:average 750 kg
Femaleweight:average 450 kg
Maleheight:average 134 cm
Femaleheight:average 124 cm
Horn:horned in both sexes
Subspecies:taurus

The Danish Jersey is a modern Danish breed of dairy cattle. It derives from approximately 5200 head of Jersey cattle imported to Denmark from the island of Jersey between about 1896 and 1909. It is the most numerous population of Jersey cattle in Europe and constitutes approximately 13% of the Danish dairy herd.

Characteristics

Danish Jerseys are smaller in stature than other dairy breeds (115-120 cm tall). They are fawn in colour with white markings not being uncommon. Coat colours will vary from lighter to dark brown, almost black. Darker brown can be found on their extremities (nose, feet, ears, and tail). Cows can weigh around 350-425 kg while bulls can weigh around 500-600 kg. Males have usually a darker coat than females.[1]

Industry

2016 Danish Jersey production statistics are on an average per cow per year basis. Total milk: 7,359 kg. Total fat: 434 kg. Fat percentage: 5.90%. Total protein: 305 kg. Protein percentage: 4.14%.[2]

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jersey. www.cattlenetwork.net. 2018-11-25.
  2. News: Viking Jersey - Breeding Aims - Danish Jersey Cattle. Nordicbull. Danish Jersey Cattle. 2018-11-24. en-GB. 2018-11-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20181126082609/http://danishjerseys.com/index.php/237-2/. dead.