# Cattle Reproductive Disorders Documented from Gaushalas of Nepal

**Authors:** Meena Pun, Bhuwan Raj Bhatt, Shambhu Shah, Narayan Neupane, Krishna Kaphle

PMC · DOI: 10.1155/2024/3058386 · Veterinary Medicine International · 2024-04-23

## TL;DR

This study examines reproductive disorders in cows from Nepal's gaushalas and highlights management and resource challenges.

## Contribution

The study provides new data on the prevalence of reproductive disorders in rescued cattle in Nepal's gaushalas.

## Key findings

- 5.54% of cows in gaushalas had reproductive disorders, with placenta retention and abortion being the most common.
- Growth of gaushalas was linked to higher prevalence of reproductive problems in cows.
- Key challenges include lack of resources, veterinary services, and grazing space.

## Abstract

Cow is the national animal of Nepal, yet it is one of the most abused animal species here. Under realized utilities of cow that is nonlactating or pregnant is the reason for demonic cruelty. Since the Vedic period, gaushalas have been caring for cows. At present, most gaushalas have responsibility to rescue, offer refuge, and treat poorly treated or confiscated cattle from smuggling rackets in Nepal. It is no surprise that these abused animals suffer from many health issues and compromised reproductive ability. This study was conducted to know about husbandry practice and to determine prevalence of reproductive disorders in cows of Gaushala from Nepal. Altogether, 27 gaushalas were visited throughout the study period and cows (≥2 years) (n = 2959) were included for the study. From the study, respondents from 14.81% Gaushala admitted indigenous cattle only, 11.11% admitted any breed (indigenous and crossbreed), 44.44% admitted stray animals only, and 29.63% admitted all types (indigenous, crossbreed, and stray animals). The study revealed that among (n = 2959) animals examined, 5.54% (n = 164) were affected by either one or more reproductive problems. The major reproductive disorders identified in study area were repeat breeding 0.47%, cervico-vaginal and uterine prolapse 0.34%, retention of placenta 2.13%, dystocia 0.61%, and abortion 1.66%. Herd size of Gaushala had a significant difference (P < 0.05) on the overall prevalence of reproductive problems in cows of Gaushala. The main issues with gaushalas included a lack of resources like adequate fund, feeds, fodder, and water, shortage of grazing acreage, veterinary services, and difficulties in managing male cattle. To mitigate the issues and welfare related to gaushalas strict adherence to disease surveillance and biosecurity rules, avoidance of unlimited reproduction in cows, and separation of males and females, fund raising and resource management, collaboration with local government and NGOs, veterinary hospital, clinics, research, and innovation with veterinary institution and universities.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** dystocia (MONDO:0006737)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** retention of placenta (MESH:D010922), reproductive disorders (MESH:D060737), Cattle Reproductive Disorders (MESH:D002418), dystocia (MESH:D004420), cervico-vaginal and uterine prolapse (MESH:D014596), abortion (MESH:D000026)
- **Species:** Bos taurus (bovine, species) [taxon 9913]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

40 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11074851/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11074851