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A typical Heck bull should be at least 1.6m high and a cow 1.4m, with weight 600 to 900kg. Heck cattle are twenty to thirty centimeters shorter than the aurochs they were bred to resemble. However, cross-breeding efforts continue to increase the size and weight of the breed, particularly in Germany.
The Heck bulls were not much larger than the bull of most breeds of domestic cattle, while wild aurochs bulls are believed to have often exceeded 1000 kilograms, half the size of a rhinoceros. So the African Watusi cattle were then brought into the herd. The result was an somewhat larger animal, but it also caused infertility among the cows, a signal of the genetic drift that had occurred between these populations of Bos over the millennia. Heck cattle were first bred outside of a zoo in 1980. There were 88 registered at that time. Continued crossbreeding with these animals resolved the infertility in the cows.
There are about 2000 Heck cattle in Europe and few elsewhere.
In Oostvaardersplassen in Flevoland near Lelystad, there are about 600 Heck cattle free roaming without human interference. Other cattle are at the Falkenthaler Rieselfelder near Berlin. There are also Heck Cattle at the Nesseaue nature reserve near Jena, Thuringia and at the Grubenfelder Leonie nature reseve in Auerbach, Bavaria. There were about 100 registered in France in 2000.
Even though trying to bring back extinct species may seem commendable, breeding back is a controversial procedure in the scientific community. Just as with the quagga project, the Heck cattle program has its detractors. Some biologists go so far as to consider the methodology used to recreate the aurochs flawed and deceitful. Professor Z. Pucek of the Bialowieza Nature Preserve regards the Heck cattle as the biggest scientific swindle of the 20th Century. Professor Pucek has devoted his life to the conservation of the surviving native wisent (European Bison) which is seen by some as competition to Heck cattle development.
Heck cattle are considered by some as the most suitable cattle breed for low intensity grazing systems to protect nature reserves. Heck cattle today are propagated in some places to fulfill the role of the aurochs in the ecosystem. However there is uncertainty as to what ecological niche the aurochs filled. Dr Frans Vera claims that the aurochs lived in open parkland and supports their inclusion in nature reserve management. Cis van Vuure, however, in his book, De Oeros—Het spoor terug suggests that the aurochs dwelled in dense forests and marshes while the wisent dwelled in the open landscape. Wisent supporters claim that Heck cattle landscape management is a public relations ploy in order to illegitimately garner suppport for Heck cattle at the expense of a genuine native species, the wisent.
SIERDA – Syndicat International pour l’Elevage, la Reconnaissance et le Développement de l’Aurochs-reconstitué (International Syndicate for the Breeding, the Reintroduction and the Development of the Heck cattle)