. Fig. 87—Glans of Bull Showing Severe (confluent) Nodular Venereal Diseases. in the calves of grade beef cows, which nurse their young and live in the open, the evidences of genital catarrh appear tardily and the bull calf may reach four to ten months of age without showing very marked evidences of matting and discoloration. Between these extremes, every possible grad- ation occurs, and wide variations are observed in individu- als confined in the same stable. Once the matting and staining have developed, they remain permanent throughout the life of the bull. The staining of the hairs is &quo


. Fig. 87—Glans of Bull Showing Severe (confluent) Nodular Venereal Diseases. in the calves of grade beef cows, which nurse their young and live in the open, the evidences of genital catarrh appear tardily and the bull calf may reach four to ten months of age without showing very marked evidences of matting and discoloration. Between these extremes, every possible grad- ation occurs, and wide variations are observed in individu- als confined in the same stable. Once the matting and staining have developed, they remain permanent throughout the life of the bull. The staining of the hairs is "fast" and can not be washed out by any ordinary means.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectveterin, bookyear1921