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  #1  
Old 04/27/09, 04:44 PM
Ernie's Avatar
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Extra Teats on Jersey Calf

Though I checked pretty vigorously when I bought her, a Jersey calf I picked up last year is now presenting an additional row of teats at the far back of her udder, giving her a total of 6. These are very small, almost vestigal.

I am a hand milker. How much trouble is this going to give me?
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Old 04/27/09, 04:56 PM
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Ernie,
How old is she? Sometimes people clip them off the heifer at a young age. It takes a good sharp pair of scissors and some iodine on it after you're through clipping them.

Most of the time I don't worry about the extra teats. They shouldn't pose too much of a problem for handmilking as long as they aren't too close.
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Old 04/27/09, 05:24 PM
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She's about a year now. They are properly spaced in a row away from the others, but it bothered me that they were present at all.

However I found some documentation on the condition. Polythelia it's called.

http://jds.fass.org/cgi/reprint/17/8/559.pdf

It's a pretty old document, but in their tests they found 60% of Jerseys had this back then. It's been culled out pretty heavily by the commercial dairymen, as multiple teats interferes with milking machines.

I don't know when they became obvious. They aren't as big as the last joint of my little finger. I looked really closely when I bought her, but she was only a couple of weeks old then and I guess they hadn't presented then. They are either vestigal and non-functioning, or they may be connected to the gland system. It's hard to say.
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Old 04/27/09, 10:26 PM
 
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You can find some older posts on this. It is normal and they do not need removing. I remember finding them on my family cow. Same thing, I had looked for extra teats and lo and behold quite a bit of time later there were "2 more on the far back of the udder, venly spaced, small" etc. almost word for word what you said.

One post I remember had the explanation that they were left over "evolutionary" type things, kind of like our appendix. Anyhow, what you are seeing is normal and should be left alone.

A true "extra teat" presents differently.

Last edited by Christina R.; 04/27/09 at 11:34 PM.
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Old 04/27/09, 11:23 PM
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Good to know. Thanks. I wasn't even considering cutting them off, but my concern was that when I try to sell her heifers in years to come I'd be furthering some weird genetic disorder.

I don't remember ever having this problem with Herefords, but we just ate them ... we didn't milk them. I really can't ever remember a day counting teats.
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Old 04/28/09, 05:46 AM
 
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Ernie, if you had scrolled down a bit further you would have found another thread on the same subject which I answered last night.

It's very common and unless they are going to foul the cups on a milking machine, are nothing to worry about. Herefords have them as well and I knew a family that milked a Hereford as a housecow and she had 8 teats, 6 of which produced milk.

Cheers,
Ronnie
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Old 04/28/09, 08:36 PM
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Makes me feel better to know it's so common.
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