The Maraîchine is a French breed of beef cattle. It originates in, and is named for, the Marais Poitevin, the marshlands on the Atlantic coast of the département of the Vendée in western France.[4]: 267 [5]: 247 [6]: 157 [7]

Maraîchine
Conservation status
Other names
  • Marchaise
  • Saintongeaise[3]: 215 
Country of originFrance
Distribution
StandardAssociation pour la Valorisation de la Race Bovine Maraîchine et des Prairies Humides
Usebeef
Traits
Weight
  • Male:
    1200 kg[2]
  • Female:
    700 kg[2]
Height
  • Male:
    145 cm[2]
  • Female:
    140 cm[2]
Skin colourblack
Coatwheaten
Horn statuslyre-shaped horns in both sexes
  • Cattle
  • Bos (primigenius) taurus

The coat ranges from light to grayish wheat, with black mucosa. It closely resembles the Nantaise and Parthenaise, two breeds also descended from the cattle that have populated western France for centuries.

The Maraîchine is renowned for its milk production and adaptation to wetlands. After WWII, it almost became extinct due to the specialization of breeds. However, the breed was saved in the 1980s through a group of friends and L'Institut de l'élevage, who reconstituted it from various animals scattered in the animal husbandry. And today, as a result of the breed's conservation program, numbers are on the rise.

History edit

The Maraîchine forms a part of the large population – sometimes called Poitevine or Vendéenne – of wheaten-coloured cattle which traditionally occupied the western part of France, from the foothills of the Massif Central in the east to the eastern Morbihan in the west.[5]: 24  It is closely related to the Parthenaise, the Nantaise and the extinct Marchoise and Berrichonne, all of which belong to the same group.[4]: 267 [8] Oxen of this type were used mainly for agricultural draught work in Haut-Poitou [fr], in the Saintonge, in Touraine and in the Vendée. The cattle were sometimes called Gâtinaises or Boeufs de Gâtine, so named for the Gâtine Vendéenne. At the end of their working lives, these oxen were often sent to the area of Cholet to be fattened for slaughter, and then were known as 'Choletaises'.[8][9]

The Maraîchine originates in the Marais Poitevin and other marshlands that lie between the estuaries of the Loire and the Gironde.[5]: 247  It may have received some influence from Dutch cattle brought to the area in the early seventeenth century by workers from the Low Countries[4]: 267  brought to the area by Humphrey Bradley, the English land drainage engineer who was maître des digues du royaume or 'master of dykes of the Kingdom' and had contracted to drain parts of the Marais de Saintonge.[10][11]: 100 [12]: 81 

In the second half of the nineteenth century many vineyards in western France were destroyed by phylloxera and uprooted; the land was turned to pasture. A number of dairy co-operatives were formed, and milk from the Maraîchine and the Parthenaise was used to produce a local type of butter, the Beurre Charentes-Poitou [fr], which quickly became well-known.[8]

In the early twentieth century breeders of the Maraîchine made extensive use of Parthenaise bulls, in the hope of increasing growth rates and achieving lighter bone structure while still maintaining dairy qualities.[13]

In 1971 the decision was taken to breed the Parthenaise for beef production only.[8] In 2000 it was agreed that the criterion for distinguishing the modern Parthenaise from the more traditional Maraîchine would be the bulls used for reproduction: offspring of bulls born later than Joli-Coeur (born in 1974) would be considered Parthenaises, while offspring of older bulls, of which stocks of semen were still held, could be considered Maraîchines. A genetic study in 2004 found Joli-Coeur and all approved Parthenais bulls born after him to be homozygous for the mh double-muscling gene, while bulls used in Maraîchine breeding were heterozygous or homozygous recessive. The Maraîchine thus represents a traditional form of the Parthenaise.[8]


A renewed interest in the breed edit

In 1986, three friends decided to reconstitute a herd of maraîchine cows. They received support from the Livestock Institute, which listed the existing maraîchine cows.

In 1987, when a farmer with a herd of parthenaise-maraîchine cows with good milk production decided to sell his livestock, the Ecomuseum of Daviaud bought the two best cows, while the trio of friends bought the rest of the herd.[14]

In 1988, the Association pour la valorisation de la race bovine maraîchine et des prairies humides (“Association for the valorisation of the Maraichine breed and wet meadows” in English) was founded, and with the support of the General Council of Vendée, purchased the first four bulls of the breed. Between 1989 and 1991, the association bought around 50 cows. From this base, many females were placed on various farms in the region. This led to the creation of a conservatory in Nalliers, where animals were entrusted to the Luçon-Pétré Agricultural College and subsequently to private individuals. In 1986, there were only thirty animals, but by 2004 [14][15]the number had risen to 1,500, including 534 cows and 60 breeding bulls.

Morphology edit

 
Head of a Maraichine cow in the Agriculture Hall.

This breed is very large: the cow measures 140 cm for 700 kg and the bull 145 cm for 1,200 kg.

Culards, unlike the Parthenaise breed, are not accepted by the Maraîchine standards.[16]

It differs from its Nantaise cousin by its slightly redder coat, the black color of the mucous membranes, the edges of the ears, the shape of its head, and its less straight horns.[14]

Abilities edit

 
Maraîchine cow lying down

The Maraîchine is a mixed and hardy breed, in particular to diseases and parasites. Also, it has a long lifespan with a high fertility rate. In addition, it thrives in wet meadows (with their characteristic vegetation), the environment in which it has historically been bred, and it can withstand the fluctuations between drought and high humidity that occur in sub-humid marshes.[17]

In the past, it produced 5,000 kg[18] of milk per lactation for local consumption, and this delicious milk contributed to the reputation of Charente-Poitou butter. It was also used as a working animal.

Today, their milk is used almost exclusively for calf rearing, and there was only one dairy farm in 2004. Maraîchine produces good-quality meat, mainly from three-year-old steers and suckling calves.

Selection and conservation program edit

Maraîchine has always been bred in the marshes of western France. Its breeders selected their animals so that they were best adapted to the marshy environment and wet meadows. This long selection process has given the breed its distinctive character.[19]

In 1988, with the support of the Marais Poitevin Regional Nature Park (renamed Regional Nature Park in 2014), the breed was recognized and a herdbook was created. When efforts to save the breed began, the Association for the valorisation of the Maraichine breed and wet meadows bought the cows and then returned them to the farms, remaining co-owners.

Although this is no longer the case for the females, the system has persisted for the males. After being selected by a technical conservation group (in which the association, Livestock Institute, and INRA participate), they are purchased by the association and placed in a breeding station belonging to a member breeder. They are then returned to the breeder's farm as needed.[14]

While it was easy to find old maraîchine cows on farms, it was otherwise difficult to find male breeding stock. The current herd is almost entirely descended from four crossbred Parthenaise bulls born in the 1960s (their semen having been found) and from one living crossbreed Parthenaise bull. The semen of a son of this latter bull is collected in the artificial insemination center of Saint-Symphorien, at the request of the Livestock Institute.

Today, the semen of 28 bulls is stored and available for artificial insemination.[14] The inbreeding rate among females is only 1.8%, which is very low for a breed with a small population.[20]

Circulation edit

The breeding farms are mainly located in the wetlands and marshes of France's west coast, between the Loire and Gironde estuaries. These include the Breton marshes, les basses vallées angevines, the Olonne Marshes, the Poitevin Marshes, and the Saintongeais Marshes (comprising the Rochefort marshes, the estuary and valley of Charente, as well as the Seudre [21]estuary and marshes).

References edit

  1. ^ Barbara Rischkowsky, Dafydd Pilling (editors) (2007). List of breeds documented in the Global Databank for Animal Genetic Resources, annex to The State of the World's Animal Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture. Rome: Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. ISBN 9789251057629. Archived 23 June 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e Breed data sheet: Maraîchine / France (Cattle). Domestic Animal Diversity Information System of the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Accessed February 2024.
  3. ^ Marleen Felius (1995). Cattle Breeds: An Encyclopedia. Doetinchem, Netherlands: Misset. ISBN 9789054390176.
  4. ^ a b c Valerie Porter, Lawrence Alderson, Stephen J.G. Hall, D. Phillip Sponenberg (2016). Mason's World Encyclopedia of Livestock Breeds and Breeding (sixth edition). Wallingford: CABI. ISBN 9781780647944.
  5. ^ a b c Marie Dervillé, Stéphane Patin, Laurent Avon (2009). Races bovines de France: origine, standard, sélection (in French). Paris: Éditions France Agricole. ISBN 9782855571515.
  6. ^ Serge Chevallier (2002). Harmonies pastorales: les bovins rustiques sauvegarde des terroirs (in French). Paris: Éditions du Gerfaut. ISBN 9782914622103.
  7. ^ Lucie Markey-Teneze, Delphine Duclos (2019). La Maraîchine (in French). Paris: Institut de l’Elevage. Archived 1 February 2024.
  8. ^ a b c d e Laurent Avon (2009). La race bovine Parthenaise (in French). Institut de l'Elevage. Archived 6 August 2020.
  9. ^ Étude de la race bovine: Parthenaise (in French). Bureau des Ressources Génétiques. Archived 1 April 2009.
  10. ^ Basil Morgan (2004). Bradley, Humphrey (fl. 1584–1625), designer of land drainage systems. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online edition). Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/50333. (subscription required).
  11. ^ Lawrence Ernest Harris (1961). The Two Netherlanders: Humphrey Bradley and Cornelis Drebbel. Leiden: E.J. Brill.
  12. ^ Louis Edouard Marie Hippolyte, comte de Dienne (1891). Histoire du desséchement des lacs et marais en France avant 1789 (in French). Paris: H. Champion.
  13. ^ Laurent Avon (2008). La race bovine Maraîchine (in French). Institut de l'Elevage. Archived 19 February 2024.
  14. ^ a b c d e "La race bovine maraîchine". ProNaturA France (in French).
  15. ^ "Standard de la race". Vache Maraichine (in French).
  16. ^ Berland, Francis; Signoret, Frédéric; Roche, Bénédicte (2006). Conserver et valoriser la race bovine Maraîchine et les prairies naturelles de marais (in French). Vol. 6. pp. 485–494.
  17. ^ Steyaert, Patrick. "The Maraîchine breed: A biological object mediating various forms of knowledge". International Social Science Journal. 58: 87–96.
  18. ^ "La Vache Maraîchine". Le CREGENE (in French).
  19. ^ "La maraichine" (in French). [archive]
  20. ^ Avon, Laurent; Colleau, J. Jacques (2006). Conservation in situ de 11 races bovines françaises à très faibles effectifs : bilan génétique et perspectives (in French). Vol. 13. Rencontres Recherches Ruminants. pp. 247–250.
  21. ^ "Les élevages" (in French).[archive], Association pour la valorisation de la race bovine maraîchine et des prairies humides (accessed on December 27, 2009).