Treatment of Scrub Bulls in KVS

Question

In Key Village Scheme (KVS), unrecognized bulls / scrub bulls should undergo:

Select an answer

In Key Village Scheme (KVS), unrecognized bulls / scrub bulls should undergo:

  1. Castration — Correct Answer
  2. Inclusion in breeding program
  3. Dehorning
  4. Deworming
Explanation:
Correct Answer: Castration

In the Key Village Scheme (KVS), unrecognized bulls/scrub bulls were subjected to castration. A mass castration program was included as part of KVS to eliminate scrub bulls from random mating and improve the genetic quality of cattle.

Why Castration was Necessary
  • Scrub bulls (low-genetic-quality bulls) were causing random, uncontrolled mating with cows, leading to degraded offspring.
  • By castrating these bulls, only recognized, high-quality stud bulls from government breeding farms were allowed to mate, improving the breed.
  • This was the core objective of KVS — systematic cattle breed improvement.
KVS at a Glance
  • Launched: August 1952 (First Five-Year Plan)
  • Also known as: 'Mother of All Schemes'
  • First systematic cattle improvement initiative in India
  • Replaced by ICDP in 1965
Why Other Options Are Wrong
  • Inclusion in breeding — opposite of the goal; scrub bulls were excluded from breeding.
  • Dehorning — a management practice unrelated to genetic improvement goals of KVS.
  • Deworming — a routine health measure, not the specific action mandated for scrub bulls in KVS.

📚 About this Topic — Animal Refresher

This multiple choice question is from Animal Refresher, Veterinary Extension Education. It has 4 options with a detailed explanation of the correct answer. Practice more MCQs from Animal Refresher to strengthen your preparation.

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