Not to be confused with Krishna valley, a large ISKCON farm in Hungary.
The Krishna Valley is an Indian breed of draught cattle.[3] It originated in the areas drained by the Krishna, Ghataprabha and Malaprabha rivers. It is a recently-created breed, bred in the late nineteenth century as a draught animal for agricultural purposes.
In 1946 the total breed population was estimated to be approximately 650 000; by 2012 it was believed that the number had fallen below 1000 head.[2]: 222 The range of the breed has contracted, and it is now found only in northern Karnataka,[5] in the districts of Bagalkot, Belgaum and Bijapur. A breed conservation programme was started in the early twenty-first century. Semen was collected from eight selected bulls; more than 4000 doses were used for artificial insemination, and another 8000 doses were frozen for conservation in the gene bank of the National Bureau of Animal Genetic Resources.[6][7] A small conservation herd is kept at Bangalore.[2]: 222
Use
The Krishna Valley was bred for heavy draught work, both for ploughing agricultural land and for the transport of crops such as cotton and sugar cane. It was among the zebuine breeds used in the creation of the American Brahman composite breed.[8]: 192
^ abN.R. Joshi, R.W. Phillips (1953). Zebu cattle of India and Pakistan. FAO agricultural studies, number 19. Rome: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations.
These are the cattle breeds considered in India to be wholly or partly of Indian origin. Inclusion here does not necessarily imply that a breed is predominantly or exclusively Indian.