fbpx
Wikipedia

Wagyu

Wagyu (Japanese: 和牛, Hepburn: wagyū, lit.'Japanese cattle') is the collective name for the four principal Japanese breeds of beef cattle. All wagyū cattle derive from cross-breeding in the early twentieth century of native Japanese cattle with imported stock, mostly from Europe.[1]: 5 

Japanese Black cattle of the Tajima strain on a farm in northern Hyōgo Prefecture
High-grade sliced Matsusaka wagyu beef
Wagyu authentication

Wagyu beef is one of the most expensive meats in the world.[2] It features marbling, meaning that streaks of fat exist within the red meat that make it tender and moist, while adding flavor. Wagyu beef is often known by different names depending on its place of origin. In several Japanese prefectures, Wagyu beef is shipped with an area name; examples include Matsusaka beef, Kobe beef from the Tajima cattle, Yonezawa beef and Ōmi beef. In recent years, Wagyu beef has increased in fat percentage due to a decrease in grazing and an increase in the use of feed, resulting in larger, fattier cattle.[3][4][5]

Definition edit

Wagyu means "Japanese cattle" and is not the name of a breed of cattle. Japanese native cattle became almost extinct after the Meiji Restoration (1868), mainly as a result of crossbreeding with European breeds, with exceptions such as the Mishima cattle. There are only a few hundred Japanese native cattle, and meat from these cattle is rarely sold on the market. Therefore, Wagyu today refers to four breeds called improved Wagyu (改良和牛, kairyō wagyū) that have been established as fixed breeds through crossbreeding with European breeds.

The rich marbling that is considered a characteristic of Wagyu is actually a feature of the Japanese Black breed, and not of the other three breeds. This is often misunderstood because the Japanese Black currently accounts for 97% of all Wagyu raised in Japan.[6]

In 2001, bovine spongiform encephalopathy was reported in Japanese cattle and became a major social problem. Since then, the testing and registration of cattle in Japan has been tightened. Since 2007, only four breeds of kairyō washu and their crossbreds, as well as cattle born, raised, and duly registered in Japan, are allowed to be labeled as Wagyu for meat.[7]

Western breeds such as Holstein and Jersey are also raised in Japan for dairy cattle. When meat from these cattle is sold in Japan, it must be labeled "domestic beef" (国産牛), not "Wagyu." [7]

Origin edit

 
Wagyu show in Sasebo, Japan

In 1927, fossils of an ancient wild cattle, Hanaizumi Moriushi (Leptobison hanaizumiensis), dating from the Paleolithic period about 20,000 years ago, were discovered at the Hanaizumi Site in Ichinoseki City, Iwate Prefecture. The Hanaizumi Moriushi is a species similar to the bison and is said to be close to the steppe bison (Bison priscus) lineage. Fossil bones of Aurochs (Bos primigenius) have also been found in Ichinoseki City.[8] Since Hokkaido and Honshu were land-locked with the Eurasian continent during the Ice Age, these animals came from the continent via Hokkaido.

In addition, projectile points made from polished wild cattle bones have been found at the same site, although in small quantities, suggesting that humans existed during this period and that hanaizumi moriushi and aurochs were hunted.[8]

At the Ohama Site in Goto City, Nagasaki Prefecture, cattle teeth dating to the middle Yayoi period were excavated.[9] Among them were also processed cattle molars. However, this excavation was controversial because it contradicted the statement in the Wajinden in Chen Shou's Records of the Three Kingdoms that there were no cattle or horses in Japan.[10] Later, radiocarbon dating of the excavated cattle molars yielded a date of around 40 AD (±90 years).[11]

 
Cow-shaped haniwa
 
Wagyu Prefectures
1
Miyazaki Prefecture
2
Hokkaido
3
Kagoshima Prefecture
4
Shiga Prefecture
5
Miyagi Prefecture
6
Gifu Prefecture
7
Kumamoto Prefecture
8
Hyogo Prefecture
9
Kagawa Prefecture

However, some in the Japanese archaeological community remain skeptical about the presence of cattle in Japan during the Yayoi period, and there is a persistent view that they were brought to Japan from the Korean peninsula by the toraijin, a group of people who came to Japan in the mid-5th century during the Kofun period. At the Nango-Ōhigashi site in Gose City, Nara Prefecture, excavations revealed cow bones believed to date back to the 5th century. At the Funamiya Kofun Tumulus (late 5th century) in Asago City, Hyogo Prefecture, pieces of a cow-shaped haniwa (clay figurine), believed to be the oldest in Japan, have been excavated. In addition, a cow-shaped haniwa was excavated from the Hashida No. 1 Tumulus in Tawaramoto Town, Shiki-gun, Nara Prefecture in the first half of the 6th century, and was designated as an Important Cultural Property of Japan in 1958.[12]

On the other hand, recent genetic studies have shown that Wagyu and Korean cattle (Hanwoo and others) differ greatly in their genetic information. Livestock cattle are divided into two major lineages: northern lineage cattle (Bos taurus) and Indian lineage cattle (Bos indicus), and both Wagyu and Korean cattle belong to the northern lineage and do not contain Indian lineage such as Zebu cattle.[13]

However, in terms of mitochondrial DNA sequence haplogroups, haplogroup T4 (East Asian type) is predominant in the Wagyu (Japanese Black) at about 65%, while haplogroup T3 (European type) is predominant in Korean cattle at 66-83%.[13][14]

T4 is a haplogroup unique to East Asia that is not observed in Near Eastern, European, and African cattle, and T3 is the predominant haplogroup in European cattle, but T3 is also predominant in Korean cattle. This means that the present breed of Korean cattle is not the main ancestor of the Wagyu.

In addition, haplogroup P has also been detected in about 46% of the Japanese Shorthorn.[15] has been detected in many extinct European aurochs, but has only been found in a total of three current livestock cattle, one Chinese and two Korean, out of several thousand individuals in the database.

The Japanese Shorthorn was created by crossing the Nanbu cattle bred in the former Nanbu Domain territory in northeastern Japan (present-day Iwate Prefecture) with Shorthorns and other breeds imported from the United States, but P has not been detected in Shorthorns and is thought to be derived from the Nanbu cattle.[15]

Fossils of Hanaizumi Moriushi and Aurochs have been found in Iwate Prefecture, but it is unclear if the Nanbu cattle were related to these. Haplogroup P has also been found in Chinese and Korean cattle, but it is extremely rare compared to T4. Therefore, it is suggested that the ancestors of the Nanbu cattle have a different origin from the ancestors of the Japanese Black in western Japan, where T4 is abundant, and that there is no single ancestor of the Wagyu.

History edit

Cattle were brought to Japan from the Korean Peninsula or China, but archaeological and genetic studies have proposed different dates for their arrival, ranging from around A.D. to the 5th century.

Nara period (710-794) edit

In 675, due to the influence of Buddhism, Emperor Tenmu issued a decree banning meat eating, and eating cattle was officially prohibited in Japan. However, a study of human excrement excavated from the Heijo Palace site has revealed that Japanese people in the Nara period (710–794) continued to eat cattle even after the prohibition.[16] In addition, the Yoro Code (757) stipulates that when a government-owned horse and ox dies, it should be dismembered and the skin, brain, horns, and gall bladder removed, and if there is calculus bovis (gallstones), it should be delivered to the state.[17] The Yoro Code also includes provisions for the sale of the hides and meat of horses and cattle, and there were distribution channels throughout Japan for buying and selling these items during the Nara period.

Heian and Kamakura period (794-1333) edit

 
"Swift Bull," 13th century

During the Heian period (794 - 1185), the main use of cattle was for bullock carts. Cattle that excelled in this use were called sun-gyū (駿牛, swift bulls) and were regarded as excellent bulls. Owning such an excellent bull became a source of pride for the aristocrats of Japan at that time.

The "Pictorial Record of Swift Bulls" (駿牛絵詞) which is believed to have been written around 1279, is said to be the world's oldest specialized book on bulls.[18] In the same book, the names of 52 bulls are listed as swift bulls. At the time, the cattle from Iki Island in present-day Nagasaki Prefecture had the highest reputation as swift bulls, but they were temporarily destroyed by the Mongolian army during the Mongolian invasion, which killed them and used them as food.

From the Kamakura period (1185–1333) to the Muromachi period (1336–1573), farming using cattle and horses became popular mainly in western Japan, contributing greatly to the development of agriculture. In a complaint by a farmer in 1423, describing the wrongdoing of a manor administrator, the fact that the farmer owned cattle and used them for farming is mentioned.[19]

Edo period (1603-1867) edit

 
Wagyu depicted in Ukiyo-e. From "The Sixty-nine Stations of the Kiso Kaidō" by Hiroshige Utagawa.

Until about the time of the Meiji Restoration in 1868, cattle were used only as draught animals, in agriculture, forestry, mining and for transport, and as a source of fertilizer. Milk consumption was unknown, and – for cultural and religious reasons – meat was not eaten. Cattle were highly prized and valuable, too expensive for a poor farmer to buy.[1]: 2 

Japan was effectively isolated from the rest of the world from 1635 until 1854; there was no possibility of the intromission of foreign genes to the cattle population during this time.

In western Japan during the Edo period (1603–1867), superior cattle were produced by aggressive inbreeding, and the superior bloodlines were called "tsuru" (, lit.'vine'), and cattle with superior bloodlines (tsuru-ushi, lit.'vine cattle') were traded at high prices.[20] Famous tsuru include the Takenotani tsuru (Okayama Prefecture), Bokura tsuru (Shimane Prefecture), Iwakura tsuru (Hiroshima Prefecture), and Shusuke tsuru (Hyogo Prefecture). In Japan, where meat eating was frowned upon and the use of milk was not widespread, cows in the Edo period were basically work cattle that plowed the fields, so a good cow in this period meant one that was healthy and obedient.

 
Image of "tsuru" and "tsuru-ushi"

The famous "Tajiri-go" bull was born from the "Atsuta tsuru," which is a descendant of the Shusuke tsuru. According to a survey conducted by the Japan Wagyu Registry Association, the pedigree was traced from a database of 718,969 Japanese black cattle mothers registered in Japan, and it was found that 718,330 or 99.9% of them are descended from the Tajiri-go.[21]

On the other hand, there are those who are concerned about the current situation in which only the Tajima cattle line represented by the Tajiri-go is spreading and genetic diversity is being lost from Wagyu, and the movement to revive the Takenotani tsuru has been attracting attention in recent years.[22]

In 1859, Japan opened the port of Yokohama in accordance with the demands of Western nations. At the same time, a foreign settlement was established in Yokohama. Foreign residents sought cattle for meat from neighboring villages but were refused, so cattle were imported from the U.S., China, and Korea, which gradually became unable to meet the demand.

In 1865, before the Port of Kobe was opened, the Hyogo Port Opening Demand Incident occurred, in which nine warships from Britain, France, the Netherlands, and the United States invaded Hyogo Port demanding its opening. At that time, sailors negotiated with local cattle merchants for cattle, which were initially slaughtered on board, but as demand increased, it became necessary to slaughter them on land. 1866 saw the first slaughter of cattle by foreigners in the pine forests of Cape Wadamisaki.[23] In this way, foreign ships bought 30 or 40 cows at a time in Kobe before the port opened and brought them to Yokohama, where "Kobe beef" (actually Tajima beef) became well known for its delicious taste.[23]

Modern times edit

 
Ukiyo-e depicting the Port of Kobe after its opening

In January 1868, when the new port of Kobe opened east of the Hyogo Port, the Kobe foreign settlement was established. In 1868, Englishman Edward Charles Kirby established the first slaughterhouse in Kobe, and in 1869, a sukiyaki restaurant called "Gekka-tei" opened in Kobe.[23][24]

According to a newspaper article in 1875, Kobe was the first place where meat eating was popular, with 800 cows slaughtered in a month. Next was Yokohama with 600, followed by Tokyo with 500, and Osaka and Nagoya with 300.[25]

The reputation of Wagyu beef as having a superior taste spread from the residents of the foreign settlement to the Japanese, and it was written in books of the time that "Wagyu beef has a better taste than foreign beef"[26] and "there has never been beef as good as Kobe's beef".[27]

At the same time, however, it was also believed that Wagyu were superior to Western breeds for plowing use but inferior in milk and meat production, and their improvement was urgently needed.[28]

Between 1868, the year of the Meiji Restoration, and 1887, some 2600 foreign cattle were imported.[1]: 7  At first, there was little interest in cross-breeding these with the native stock, but from about 1900, it became widespread.

In 1900, the Japanese government established a committee to investigate the improvement of cattle breeding, and began a systematic crossbreeding program between Wagyu and Western breeds. The Ayrshire and Simmental breeds were imported first, followed by the Brown Swiss, but few people wanted to crossbreed with them because of their large size, and the Japanese government encouraged it, but the crossbreds were very unpopular. [29]

The crossbreds' oversized stature made them inconvenient for Japan's narrow arable land, and their movements were slow and sluggish, and their temperaments were rough and lacking in obedience. They also had poor meat quality and were condemned from all quarters as being unsuitable for sukiyaki.[29] As a result, from around 1907, there were no more crossbreds being bred, and in reaction, the old black cattle were considered good, and as long as they were small and black, they could be sold.[29]

As crossbreeding with Western breeds progressed, the term "pure Wagyu" (純粋和牛, junsui Wagyū)[30][31] emerged to describe native Japanese cattle, and by 1912, it was claimed that there were two definitions of Wagyu: "pure Wagyu" and "improved Wagyu" (改良和牛, kairyō Wagyū).[32]

At the time, Mendel's laws had just been rediscovered, and both the Japanese government and cattle farmers lacked sufficient knowledge of genetics. The unpopularity of crossbred cattle led to the Japanese government's decision in 1911 to suspend plans to purchase Brown Swiss and Simmental cattle. In 1912, the Japanese government decided to formally end its policy of encouraging crossbreeding by announcing that crossbreeding between Wagyu and European breeds had been sufficiently successful.[33] From then on, Wagyu improvement was based on pure Wagyu and improved Wagyu (crossbred cattle).

 
"Fukutomi-go," one of the first Improved Japanese Breeds to win the first prize (1912)

In October 1912, when the 6th Chugoku Six Prefectures United Livestock Breeders' Show was held in Himeji City, Hyogo Prefecture, two crossbred bulls won the first prize as "Improved Japanese Breeds" (改良和種, kairyō washu) and the name "Improved Japanese Breed" came into use thereafter. [34] Thereafter, organized breeding efforts to increase the number of superior Wagyu cattle began.

According to a survey conducted in 1914, there were 61 different breeds of Wagyu in Japan at that time, including Tajima cattle, Iwaizumi cattle, Mishima cattle, Aso cattle, and others.[35] However, these were not actual breeds, but only names of regional classifications.

In the case of Hyogo Prefecture, the leading producer of Wagyu cattle (Kobe cattle and Tajima cattle) at that time, the number of stud bulls owned by breed as of 1914 was as follows.

Number of stud bulls owned in Hyogo Prefecture by breed (1914) [36]
National Prefectural Publicly owned Private Total
Ayrshire Breed 30 5 17 52
Ayrshire Crossbreed 11 11
Brown Swiss Breed 5 5
Brown Swiss Crossbreed 4 4
Holstein Breed 18 18
Holstein Crossbreed 23 23
Jersey Crossbreed 1 1
Improved Japanese Breed 1 13 57 2 73
Japanese Breed 71 16 87
Total 1 52 133 88 274

Even after the Meiji era when hybrid cattle were encouraged, there were still a considerable number of pure Wagyu cattle remaining in the Taisho era (1912–1926). As a policy for the improvement of Wagyu, efforts were made to eliminate negative characteristics of hybrid cattle as much as possible. Specifically, the elimination of sudare (tiger stripes), nori-kuchi (grayish-white lips), unagi-sen (different fur color on the dorsal line), white spots, etc.[37] On the other hand, both pure and improved Wagyu cattle strived to improve their physique and weight, and from around the 1920s, the term "improved Wagyu" came to refer to all Wagyu cattle, including not only improved Wagyu but also pure Wagyu.

Around 1919, the examination and registration of Wagyu began mainly in western Japan, and pedigrees and body types began to be registered. Nine breeds were registered: Tajima, Bisaku, Hiroshima, Bocho, Shimane, Inhaku, Bungo, Kumamoto, and Kagoshima.[38] However, the examination and registration process was carried out by each prefecture, and the criteria for examination varied. Around 1925, the results of the improvements became visible: the negative characteristics of crossbreeding had almost disappeared from Wagyu cattle, and their size and weight had increased, and improvements in hindquarters were clearly visible.

 
"Tajiri-go," a famous bull of the Japanese black

In 1937, when the former Japan Livestock Industry Association became the central organization for the registration of cattle throughout Japan, the breed names of "Japanese Black," "Japanese Polled," and "Japanese Brown" were created in place of the above nine breeds.

 
Japanese brown

In 1944, it was officially decided to abolish the conventional name "Improved Japanese Breed" and call the breeds Japanese Black, Japanese Brown, and Japanese Polled, as the characteristics of each breed had been clarified as a result of improvements.[39] This meant that the three crossbreeds were recognized as fixed breeds. Then, in 1957, the Japanese Shorthorn was added. They are collectively known as Wagyu.

The Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) from 1986 to 1994, which set rules for liberalization of international trade, decided to liberalize imports of foreign beef to Japan. Beef imports have been liberalized since 1991. In FY1993, beef imports jumped 34% over the previous year, and as a result, Japan's beef self-sufficiency rate dropped below 50%.[40]

The liberalization of beef imports has brought about changes in Japan's domestic Wagyu beef production system. In order to compete with cheaper foreign beef, Japanese livestock farmers have become more biased toward raising the Japanese Black breed, which has a unique marbling characteristic. As a result, the number of the other three Wagyu breeds has decreased.

Following the outbreak of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE) in Japan, the Law for Special Measures Concerning the Management and Relay of Information for Individual Identification of Cattle (Beef Traceability Law) was enacted in 2003. This law stipulates the attachment of ear marks to cattle, the notification, recording, and storage of historical information from birth to beef, and the publication of recorded information on the Internet. In other words, it is possible to trace the history of all Japanese beef sold in Japan.[41]

Breeds and brands edit

Breeds edit

Wagyu grazing video

Wagyu edit

Most of today's Wagyu are improved Wagyu (改良和牛, kairyō wagyū) that have been fixed as breeds through crossbreeding with foreign breeds. There are four breeds of improved Wagyu as follows:[42]: 66 [43]: 420 [44]

Native Wagyu edit

Native Wagyu (在来和牛, zairai wagyū) are cattle from ancient Japan that have not been crossbred with foreign breeds. It is also called "Japanese breed," "pure Japanese breed," "pure Wagyu," etc. There are two breeds of native Wagyu as follows:

Brands edit

 
Kobe beef
 
Kobe beef certificate

Today, each region in Japan has its own brand of Wagyu beef, numbering more than 320.[48] The first Wagyu beef to gain a reputation was Kobe beef, already famous since the 1860s and known to foreign countries through foreign residents.[49][50] Ōmi beef also had a reputation since the Meiji era (1868–1912) for its delicious taste.[51] In the Taisho era (1912–1926), Matsusaka beef also became well known.[52] These were originally Tajima cattle, and calves were purchased from the Tajima region, fattened in each region, and then sold.

In the Tokyo area, Yonezawa beef has also been known since the Meiji era.[50]

Since the 1980s, Wagyu beef branding has been promoted in various regions of Japan. However, the Japanese Trademark Law at the time did not allow for the establishment of regional collective trademarks, which posed a problem in terms of legal protection. Before the Beef Traceability Law (2003) was enacted, there were also issues regarding the verification of the origin, breeding location, and distribution of Wagyu beef.

In 2006, the Japanese Trademark Law was amended to recognize regional collective trademarks, allowing Wagyu beef to be registered as a "regional brand." In 2014, the Geographical Indications Law was passed, and the operation of Geographical Indications (GI) protection began in 2015. Currently, the GI-registered brands of Wagyu beef are as follows.[53]

  • Tajima Beef: Tajima beef is beef from the Tajima region of Hyogo Prefecture, and has a history of about 1,200 years.[54]
  • Kobe Beef: Kobe Beef is a brand given to the highest quality beef from Hyogo Prefecture's Tajima cattle and has a history of about 170 years.[55]
  • Special Matsusaka Beef: Special Matsuzaka Beef (Tokusan Matsusaka Ushi) is a brand given to the highest quality virgin female beef from the Matsuzaka region of Mie Prefecture. The Matsusaka beef brand has a history of about 100 years.[56]
  • Yonezawa Beef: Yonezawa Beef (Yonezawa Gyu) is beef from virgin Japanese black female cattle in the Okitama region of Yamagata Prefecture and has a history of about 150 years.[57]
  • Maesawa Beef: Maesawa Beef is a brand given to the highest quality beef from the Maesawa area of Iwate Prefecture, and has a history of about 70 years.[58]
  • Miyazaki Beef: Miyazaki Beef is a brand of wagyu beef from Miyazaki Prefecture, and has often won the Wagyu Olympics in recent years.[59]
  • Ōmi Beef: Ōmi Beef is a wagyu beef brand from Shiga Prefecture with a history of about 400 years.[60]
  • Kagoshima Black Beef: Kagoshima Black Beef (Kagoshima Kuroushi) is a wagyu beef brand from Kagoshima Prefecture that won the recent Wagyu Olympics.[61]
  • Kumamoto Red Beef: Kumamoto Red Beef (Kuamoto Akaushi) is a wagyu beef from Kumamoto Prefecture, characterized by its lean meat.[62]
  • Hiba Beef: Hiba Beef is a brand of Japanese black cattle from Shobara City, Hiroshima Prefecture, with a history dating back to the Edo period.[63]
  • Hida Beef: Hida Beef is a Japanese beef from Gifu Prefecture and has a history of about 100 years.[64]
  • Olive-Fed Wagyu Beef: Olive-Fed Wagyu Beef is a brand of Japanese black cattle that is fed olives. It is one of the rarest beef in the world.[65]

Characteristics of Wagyu beef edit

 
Wagyu beef marbling

One of the primary characteristics of Wagyu beef is the fine marbling of fat within the red meat, known as sashi, and the high ratio of intramuscular fat. However, of the four Wagyu breeds, only the Japanese Black breed has this characteristic, while the other three breeds do not have a high degree of marbling. The degree of marbling varies depending on sex, castration, and fattening method, but in the case of the Japanese Black, it is thought that genes play a major role.[66]

This characteristic of marbled meat is also found in the Mishima cattle, a native Wagyu breed.[67] However, this characteristic is not seen in the Kuchinoshima cattle, which are also a native Wagyu breed. In addition, it is the Tajima cattle strain among the Japanese Black cattle that tend to have marbled meat, while the Takenotani tsuru strain in Okayama Prefecture, for example, is characterized by rather red meat.[68]

The fat content of the Japanese Black breed is known for its high content of monounsaturated fatty acids (e.g., oleic acid).[69] Generally, the melting point of beef fat is 40-50 degrees Celsius, but monounsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point, so the melting point of Wagyu beef fat is below that of butter (around 30 degrees Celsius). Therefore, the fat melts at body temperature as soon as it is put in the mouth, and this is thought to be one of the main reasons for the tender, melt-in-your-mouth texture that is unique to Wagyu beef.

Wagyu beef, especially Japanese black beef, is known to have a unique sweet aroma called "Wagyu beef aroma," which is thought to be caused by complex compounds such as lactones.[70] Lactones, which are also found in peaches and coconuts, are more abundant in Wagyu beef, and their aroma increases when the beef is heated.

Wagyu beef grades edit

Beef grades indicate the quality of the meat, and in Japan they are determined based on the "Beef Carcass Trade Standards" established with the approval of the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Two grades are used to determine the rating, one is the yield grade and the other is the meat quality grade.

The yield grade is divided into three grades, A, B, and C, with the highest grade being A. The meat quality grade is divided into five grades, 5, 4, 3, 2, and 1, with the highest grade being 5.

Beef is graded in a total of 15 ways: A1 to A5, B1 to B5, and C1 to C5, combining the two grades, with A5 indicating the highest quality in both yield and meat quality grades.

The yield grade refers to the percentage of edible meat in a cow. The meat quality grade is determined by four criteria: marbling, meat color, meat firmness and texture, and fat luster and quality.[71]

Beef Grades
Yield Grade Meat Quality Grade
5 4 3 2 1
A A5 A4 A3 A2 A1
B B5 B4 B3 B2 B1
C C5 C4 C3 C2 C1

International Wagyu edit

International Wagyu is regulated and promoted through the World Wagyu Council.[72]

Australia edit

 
A Wagyu bull in Australia

The Australian Wagyu Association is the largest breed association outside Japan.[73] Both fullblood and Wagyu-cross cattle are farmed in Australia for domestic and overseas markets, including Taiwan, China, Canada, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, the U.K., France, Germany, Denmark and the U.S.[74] Australian Wagyu cattle are grain fed for the last 300–500 days of production.[citation needed] Wagyu bred in Western Australia's Margaret River region often have red wine added to their feed as well.[75]

United States edit

In the United States, some Japanese Wagyu cattle are cross-bred with American Angus stock. Meat from this cross-breed is marketed as "American-Style Kobe Beef",[76] or "Wangus",[77] although many American retailers simply (inaccurately) refer to it as Wagyu. Wagyu were first competitively exhibited at the National Western Stock Show in 2012.[78] Other U.S. Wagyu breeders have full-blooded animals directly descended from original Japanese bloodlines, that are registered through the American Wagyu Association.[79]

Canada edit

Wagyu cattle farming in Canada appeared after 1991 when the Canadian Wagyu Association was formed. Wagyu style cattle and farms in Canada are located in Alberta,[80] Saskatchewan,[81] Ontario,[82] Quebec,[83] British Columbia,[84] Prince Edward Island,[85] and Newfoundland and Labrador.[86] Canadian Wagyu beef products are exported to the US (including Hawaii), Australia, New Zealand, and Europe.[85]

United Kingdom edit

In 2008, a herd of Wagyu cattle was imported to North Yorkshire, first becoming available for consumption in 2011.[87] Since 2011, there have been Wagyu herds in Scotland.[88][89][90][91][92] There are British & Irish Wagyu Fullbloods registered through the British Wagyu Breeders Association.[93]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Kiyoshi Namikawa (2016 [1992]). Breeding history of Japanese beef cattle and preservation of genetic resources as economic farm animals. Kyoto: Wagyu Registry Association. Accessed January 2017.
  2. ^ Kim, Jack Houston, Irene Anna. "The rarest steak in the world can cost over $300. Here's why wagyu beef is so expensive". Business Insider. Retrieved 26 May 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ Gotoh, Takafumi (July 2018). "The Japanese Wagyu beef industry: current situation and future prospects – A review". Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences. 31 (7): 942–47. doi:10.5713/ajas.18.0333. PMC 6039323. PMID 29973029. S2CID 49693378 – via Science Citation Index.
  4. ^ Ogino, Mizuna; Matsuura, Akihiro; Yamazaki, Atusi; Irimajiri, Mami; Takahashi, Hideyuki; Komatsu, Tokushi; Kushibiki, Shiro; Shingu, Hiroyuki; Kasuya, Etsuko (17 January 2013). "Biological rhythms related to metabolism in Japanese Shorthorn cattle under varying environments and management techniques". Animal Science Journal. 84 (6): 513–26. doi:10.1111/asj.12029. ISSN 1344-3941. PMID 23607269.
  5. ^ Higuchi, Mikito; Shiba, Nobuya; Imanri, Mai; Yonai, Miharu; Watanabe, Akira (1 April 2018). "Effects of Grazing or Exercise in the Middle of the Fattening Period on the Growth and Carcass Traits of Japanese Shorthorn Steers". Japan Agricultural Research Quarterly. 52 (2): 163–72. doi:10.6090/jarq.52.163. ISSN 0021-3551.
  6. ^ a b Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (August 2019). "肉用牛の改良増殖をめぐる情勢" [The Situation Concerning the Improvement and Propagation of Beef Cattle] (PDF). Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (in Japanese). Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 12 January 2024.
  7. ^ a b Japan External Trade Organization 2023.
  8. ^ a b Kurosawa 2008, p. 29.
  9. ^ Sakazume 1964, pp. 6–10.
  10. ^ Fukuda 1998, p. 7.
  11. ^ Fukuda 1998, p. 58.
  12. ^ Kimine 2017.
  13. ^ a b Mannen et al. 2004.
  14. ^ Kim et al. 2016.
  15. ^ a b Noda et al. 2018.
  16. ^ Imai, Kōki (1 December 2013). "天平人の腹をさぐる" [To search the belly of the Tenpyo people]. Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties (in Japanese). Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  17. ^ Matsui, Akira (2009). "肉食の忌避という虚構―動物考古学からの視点―" [The Fiction of Meat Eating Avoidance: A View from Zooarchaeology] (in Japanese). The Japanese Society of Cultural Anthropology. doi:10.14890/jasca.2009.0.4.0. Retrieved 21 August 2023.
  18. ^ Onsen Town History Editorial Committee 1984, p. 413.
  19. ^ Onsen Town History Editorial Committee 1984, p. 440.
  20. ^ Habu 1948, p. 1.
  21. ^ "The 'Father' of Japanese Black Cattle Identified," Asahi Shimbun , March 2, 2012.
  22. ^ "First shipment of 'Takenotani Tsuru,' a Japanese black breed," Tsuyama Asahi Shimbun, February 8, 2022.
  23. ^ a b c Kobe City 1924, p. 54.
  24. ^ Ochiai & Arii 1967, pp. 85–86.
  25. ^ Ochiai & Arii 1967, p. 86.
  26. ^ Dainippon Fisheries Association 1886, p. 20.
  27. ^ Nōbi 1897, p. 90.
  28. ^ Agricultural Bureau of Agriculture and Commerce 1884, p. 164.
  29. ^ a b c Habu 1950, p. 3.
  30. ^ Tengu 1901, p. 27.
  31. ^ Tanahashi 1911, p. 53.
  32. ^ Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce 1912, p. 78.
  33. ^ Animal Husbandry Bureau, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 1966, p. 308.
  34. ^ Ban 1912, p. 45.
  35. ^ Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce 1918, p. 1.
  36. ^ Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce 1915, p. 307.
  37. ^ Animal Husbandry Bureau, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries 1966, p. 314.
  38. ^ Sato 1934, p. 1636.
  39. ^ Dairy Jijo-sha 1944, p. 46.
  40. ^ Tsuchiya, Keizō (October 1994). "ウルグアイ・ラウンド合意と肉牛経営" [Uruguay Round Agreement and Beef Cattle Management]. Monthly Report "Information on Livestock Production" (in Japanese). No. 61. Agriculture & Livestock Industries Corporation. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  41. ^ "Service of individual identification information of cattle". National Livestock Breeding Center. National Livestock Breeding Center. 19 January 2018. Retrieved 13 January 2024.
  42. ^ Valerie Porter, Lawrence Alderson, Stephen J. G. Hall, D. Phillip Sponenberg (2016). Mason's World Encyclopedia of Livestock Breeds and Breeding (sixth edition). Wallingford: CABI. ISBN 9781780647944.
  43. ^ T. Muramoto, M. Higashiyama, T. Kondo (2005). Effect of pasture finishing on beef quality of Japanese Black steers. Asian-Australian Journal of Animal Science 18: 420–426.
  44. ^ Japan Meat Information Service Center. Archived 22 October 2013.
  45. ^ a b . Stillwater, Oklahoma: Oklahoma State University, Department of Animal and Food Sciences. Archived 27 October 2022.
  46. ^ [National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences] (2005). ; annex to . Rome: Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. ISBN 9789251057629. Archived 29 July 2022.
  47. ^ Kazuto Motegi (1 October 2009). . Tokyo: Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research. Archived 27 October 2022.
  48. ^ "Please tell us about the brands of beef," Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan.[1]
  49. ^ Gakuno-sha 1884, p. 283.
  50. ^ a b Pastoral Magazine 1892, p. 9.
  51. ^ Kaneko 1897, p. 158.
  52. ^ Ochi 1925, p. 135.
  53. ^ "Please tell us about brand names of beef". Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. 2021. Retrieved 25 September 2023.
  54. ^ "Tajima Gyu / Tajima Beef". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  55. ^ "Kobe Beef". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  56. ^ "Tokusan Matsusaka Ushi". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  57. ^ "Yonezawa Gyu". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  58. ^ "Maesawa Gyu". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  59. ^ "Miyazaki Beef". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  60. ^ "Omi Ushi / Omi Gyu". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  61. ^ "Kagoshima Kuroushi". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  62. ^ "Kumamoto Akaushi". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  63. ^ "Hiba Gyu". Information Website on Japan's Geographical Indications. Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  64. ^ "Hida beef from Gifu Prefecture has been registered as a Geographical Indication (GI)" (in Japanese). Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. 31 January 2023. Retrieved 25 October 2023.
  65. ^ "I tried a top-grade $240 Olive Wagyu steak to see if it's worth the money". CNBC. 17 May 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2024.
  66. ^ T. Gotoh; E. Albrecht; F. Teuscher; K. Kawabata; K. Sakashita; H. Iwamoto; J. Wegner (2009). "Differences in muscle and fat accretion in Japanese Black and European cattle". Meat Science. 82 (3): 300–308. doi:10.1016/j.meatsci.2009.01.026.
  67. ^ Kono 2013, p. 60.
  68. ^ "幻の和牛「竹の谷蔓牛」を導入 幕別の法人" [Introducing "TakenoTani Tsuru Cattle", a fantastic Japanese cattle]. Tokachi Mainichi Shimbun (in Japanese). 2 December 2018. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  69. ^ Zembayashi M et al. 1995.
  70. ^ Kazuaki Yoshinaga et al. 2021.
  71. ^ "特集2 牛肉(1)" [Special Feature 2 Beef (1)] (in Japanese). Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries. Retrieved 23 January 2024.
  72. ^ "World Wagyu Council". https://worldwagyucouncil.com/. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)
  73. ^ . australianwagyuforum.com.au. Archived from the original on 10 April 2013.
  74. ^ . wagyu.org.au. Australian Wagyu Association. Archived from the original on 10 March 2011.
  75. ^ . mrpme.com.au. Margaret River Premium Meat Exports. Archived from the original on 25 January 2014. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  76. ^ . The Japan Times. Associated Press. 12 August 2011. p. 3. Archived from the original on 28 August 2011. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  77. ^ Houston, Jack (2 August 2019). "The rarest steak in the world can cost over $300". Business Insider. Several US restaurants are serving hybrid "wangus" beef from domestically raised wagyu and Angus cows.
  78. ^ Raabe, Steve (11 January 2012). "Tender Wagyu muscles onto meat scene, makes stock-show exhibition debut". The Denver Post. from the original on 13 January 2012.
  79. ^ "Registration – DNA Tests – American Wagyu Association". wagyu.org. from the original on 1 October 2017. Retrieved 6 May 2018.
  80. ^ Spurr, Bill (22 July 2014). . The Chronicle Herald. Archived from the original on 6 December 2014. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  81. ^ Sciarpelletti, Laura (24 December 2020). "Saskatchewan: Prairie farmers using high-end Wagyu genetics to create 'snow beef'". CBC.ca. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  82. ^ . thepost.on.ca. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  83. ^ "Accueil – Éleveurs Wagyu / Wagyu Breeders". wagyuquebec.com. Retrieved 29 November 2019.
  84. ^ Arstad, Steve (28 May 2020). "This Princeton-grown beef is some of the rarest, most-prized in the world". infotel.ca. iNFOnews Ltd. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  85. ^ a b "About Us". CanadianWagyu.ca. Archived from the original on 11 October 2013.
  86. ^ "New World Beef". NewWorldBeef.ca. New World Beef. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  87. ^ Wainwright, Martin (7 February 2008). "World's dearest beef to be sold in Yorkshire". The Guardian. from the original on 11 October 2017. Retrieved 11 October 2017.
  88. ^ "Try a little tenderness: on the farm with Scotland's Wagyu cattle". The Herald. 19 November 2012. from the original on 13 April 2013. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  89. ^ "Scottish farm to make Japanese Wagyu beef". The Scotsman. from the original on 30 July 2013. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  90. ^ "Highland Wagyu beef firm in expansion drive". bbc.co.uk. BBC News. 29 July 2013. from the original on 1 August 2013. Retrieved 29 July 2013.
  91. ^ . thescottishfarmer.co.uk. The Scottish Farmer. Archived from the original on 10 August 2014. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
  92. ^ "Spreading the wagyu message". thescottishfarmer.co.uk. 18 July 2017. from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2017.
  93. ^ "British Wagyu Breeders Association". https://www.britishwagyu.co.uk/. {{cite web}}: External link in |website= (help)

References edit

  • Agricultural Bureau of Agriculture and Commerce, ed. (1884). 畜産諮詢会紀事 [Livestock Advisory Board Bulletin] (in Japanese). Agricultural Bureau of Agriculture and Commerce. doi:10.11501/841936.
  • Gakuno-sha, ed. (1884). "雑報" [general news]. Agriculture Magazine (in Japanese). No. 207. doi:10.11501/1597967.
  • Dainippon Fisheries Association, ed. (1886). 大日本水産会報告 [Report of the Dainippon Fisheries Association] (in Japanese). Dainippon Fisheries Association. doi:10.11501/1761390.
  • Pastoral Magazine, ed. (1892). "東京府下屠獣状況" [Slaughterhouse Situation in Tokyo]. Pastoral Magazine (in Japanese). No. 85. Pastoral Magazine. doi:10.11501/11209674.
  • Nōbi, Shigeyoshi (1897). 神戸の花 [Flowers of Kobe] (in Japanese). Meiki-sha. doi:10.11501/765678.
  • Kaneko, Sahei, ed. (1897). 東京新繁昌記 [Tokyo New Prosperity Report] (in Japanese). Publisher of the Tokyo New Prosperity Report. doi:10.11501/764130.
  • Tengu, Bokudo (1901). "牧牛方言(承前)" [Pastoral cattle dialect (sequel)]. Livestock Magazine (194) (in Japanese). Livestock Magazine, Inc. doi:10.11501/11209790.
  • Tanahashi, Noboru (1911). 牛の涎 : 畜産講話 [Cattle Drool : Lectures on Animal Husbandry] (in Japanese). Kinran-sha. doi:10.11501/841594.
  • Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, ed. (1912). 道庁府県畜産主任及種畜場長協議会要録 第3回 [Summary of the Meeting of Prefectural Chiefs of Livestock Production and Directors of Livestock Breederies, No. 3.] (in Japanese). Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce. doi:10.11501/841977.
  • Ban, Higashi, ed. (1912). 肉と乳 [Meat and Milk] (in Japanese). Vol. 3. Association for the Promotion of Meat Eating. doi:10.11501/3560124.
  • Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, ed. (1915). 道庁府県畜産主任及種畜場長協議会要録 第7回 [Summary of the Meeting of Prefectural Chiefs of Livestock Production and Directors of Livestock Breederies, No. 7.] (in Japanese). Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce. doi:10.11501/936344.
  • Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce, ed. (1918). 和牛ニ関スル調査 [Survey on Wagyu] (in Japanese). Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce. doi:10.11501/942456.
  • Kobe City, ed. (1924). 神戸市史 本編各説 [Kobe City History: Commentary on the main volume] (in Japanese). Kobe City. doi:10.11501/965720.
  • Ochi, Kiyo (1925). 家庭栄養日本料理 [Home Nutrition Japanese Cooking] (in Japanese). Hoshino Shoten. doi:10.11501/970355.
  • Sato, Kanji, ed. (1934). 農業大辞典 [Dictionary of Agriculture] (in Japanese). Vol. 2. Nippon Hyoron-sha. doi:10.11501/1716740.
  • Dairy Jijo-sha, ed. (1944). "全國農業會の畜産部長會議" [Livestock department manager meeting of the National Agricultural Society]. Dairy Farming Situation (in Japanese). Vol. 5, no. 4/5. Dairy Jijo-sha. doi:10.11501/2317074.
  • Habu, Yoshitaka (1948). 蔓の造成とつる牛 [Vine Creation and Vine Cattle] (in Japanese). Sangyō Tosho. doi:10.11501/1155428.
  • Habu, Yoshitaka (1950). 和牛 [Wagyu] (in Japanese). Federation of Animal Husbandry Technology. doi:10.11501/11578209.
  • Sakazume, Nakao (1964). 長崎県大浜遺跡の発掘調査概要 [Summary of Excavation at the Ohama Site, Nagasaki Prefecture]. Report on the Cultural Properties of Nagasaki Prefecture, Vol.2 (Report on the Survey of the Goto Site, 1962-1963) (in Japanese). Nagasaki Prefectural Board of Education. doi:10.11501/2476211.
  • Animal Husbandry Bureau, Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, ed. (1966). 畜産発達史 本篇 [History of Livestock Production: Main Edition] (in Japanese). Chū'ōkōron Jigyō Shuppan. doi:10.11501/1698260.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)
  • Ochiai, Shigenobu; Arii, Hajime (1967). 神戸史話 [Stories of Kobe History] (in Japanese). Sōgen-sha. doi:10.11501/2995301.
  • Onsen Town History Editorial Committee, ed. (October 1984). 温泉町史 [Onsen Town History] (in Japanese). Vol. 1. Onsen Town. doi:10.11501/9575639.
  • Zembayashi M; Nishimura K; Lunt DK; Smith SB (1995). "Effect of breed type and sex on the fatty acid composition of subcutaneous and intramuscular lipids of finishing steers and heifers". J Anim Sci. 73 (11): 3325–32. doi:10.2527/1995.73113325x. PMID 8586591.
  • Fukuda, Kazushi (31 March 1998). 大浜遺跡 [Ohama Site]. Report on the Survey of Cultural Properties in Nagasaki Prefecture (in Japanese). Vol. 141. Nagasaki Prefectural Board of Education. doi:10.24484/sitereports.46422.
  • Mannen H, Kohno M, Nagata Y, Tsuji S, Gradley DG, Yeo JS, Nyamsamba D, Zagdsuren Y, Yokohama M, Nomura K, Amano T (August 2004). "Independent mitochondrial origin and historical genetic differentiation in North Eastern Asian cattle". Mol Phylogenet Evol. 32 (2): 539–44. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2004.01.010. PMID 15223036.
  • Kurosawa, Yaetsu (25 March 2008). "モノが語る牛と人間の文化2:岩手の牛たち" [Cattle and Human Culture through Objects 2: Cattle in Iwate] (PDF). LIAJ news (in Japanese). No. 109. Livestock Improvement Association of Japan. JPNO 00080827. Retrieved 18 August 2023.
  • Kono, Tomohiro (2013). "最新のゲノム解析から探る和牛肉質のルーツ" [The Roots of Wagyu Beef Meat Quality Explored by the Latest Genome Analysis]. Academic Trends (in Japanese). 18 (4): 58–61. doi:10.5363/tits.18.4_58.
  • Kim JH, Lee SS, Kim SC, Choi SB, Kim SH, Lee CW, Jung KS, Kim ES, Choi YS, Kim SB, Kim WH, Cho CY (May 2016). "Haplogroup Classification of Korean Cattle Breeds Based on Sequence Variations of mtDNA Control Region". Asian-Australas J Anim Sci. 29 (5): 624–30. doi:10.5713/ajas.15.0692. PMC 4852222. PMID 26954229.
  • Kimine, Osamu (29 September 2017). "文献と埴輪・壁画資料から見た牛甘(飼)ー牽牛織女説話の伝来年代を含めてー" [A Study on Ushikai based on Bibliographic Material and Haniwa / Tomb Murals Including a discussion on the introduction of the legend of the cowherd and the weaver girl to Japan]. Human and Socio-environmental Studies (in Japanese). Graduate School of Human and Socio-Environmental Studies Kanazawa University (34): 77–98.
  • Noda A, Yonesaka R, Sasazaki S, Mannen H (5 January 2018). "The mtDNA haplogroup P of modern Asian cattle: A genetic legacy of Asian aurochs?". PLOS ONE. 13 (1:e0190937): e0190937. Bibcode:2018PLoSO..1390937N. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0190937. PMC 5755918. PMID 29304129.
  • Kazuaki Yoshinaga; Arisa Tago; Aya Yoshinaga-Kiriake; Naohiro Gotoh (2021). "Characterization of lactones in Wagyu (Japanese beef) and imported beef by combining solvent extraction and gas chromatography–mass spectrometry". LWT. 135. doi:10.1016/j.lwt.2020.110015. S2CID 224847982.
  • Japan External Trade Organization (2023). "Wagyu". Japan External Trade Organization. Retrieved 8 September 2023.

wagyu, comedy, comedy, japanese, 和牛, hepburn, wagyū, japanese, cattle, collective, name, four, principal, japanese, breeds, beef, cattle, wagyū, cattle, derive, from, cross, breeding, early, twentieth, century, native, japanese, cattle, with, imported, stock, . For the comedy duo see Wagyu comedy duo Wagyu Japanese 和牛 Hepburn wagyu lit Japanese cattle is the collective name for the four principal Japanese breeds of beef cattle All wagyu cattle derive from cross breeding in the early twentieth century of native Japanese cattle with imported stock mostly from Europe 1 5 Japanese Black cattle of the Tajima strain on a farm in northern Hyōgo PrefectureHigh grade sliced Matsusaka wagyu beefWagyu authenticationWagyu beef is one of the most expensive meats in the world 2 It features marbling meaning that streaks of fat exist within the red meat that make it tender and moist while adding flavor Wagyu beef is often known by different names depending on its place of origin In several Japanese prefectures Wagyu beef is shipped with an area name examples include Matsusaka beef Kobe beef from the Tajima cattle Yonezawa beef and Ōmi beef In recent years Wagyu beef has increased in fat percentage due to a decrease in grazing and an increase in the use of feed resulting in larger fattier cattle 3 4 5 Contents 1 Definition 2 Origin 3 History 3 1 Nara period 710 794 3 2 Heian and Kamakura period 794 1333 3 3 Edo period 1603 1867 3 4 Modern times 4 Breeds and brands 4 1 Breeds 4 1 1 Wagyu 4 1 2 Native Wagyu 4 2 Brands 5 Characteristics of Wagyu beef 6 Wagyu beef grades 7 International Wagyu 7 1 Australia 7 2 United States 7 3 Canada 7 4 United Kingdom 8 Notes 9 ReferencesDefinition editWagyu means Japanese cattle and is not the name of a breed of cattle Japanese native cattle became almost extinct after the Meiji Restoration 1868 mainly as a result of crossbreeding with European breeds with exceptions such as the Mishima cattle There are only a few hundred Japanese native cattle and meat from these cattle is rarely sold on the market Therefore Wagyu today refers to four breeds called improved Wagyu 改良和牛 kairyō wagyu that have been established as fixed breeds through crossbreeding with European breeds The rich marbling that is considered a characteristic of Wagyu is actually a feature of the Japanese Black breed and not of the other three breeds This is often misunderstood because the Japanese Black currently accounts for 97 of all Wagyu raised in Japan 6 In 2001 bovine spongiform encephalopathy was reported in Japanese cattle and became a major social problem Since then the testing and registration of cattle in Japan has been tightened Since 2007 only four breeds of kairyō washu and their crossbreds as well as cattle born raised and duly registered in Japan are allowed to be labeled as Wagyu for meat 7 Western breeds such as Holstein and Jersey are also raised in Japan for dairy cattle When meat from these cattle is sold in Japan it must be labeled domestic beef 国産牛 not Wagyu 7 Origin edit nbsp Wagyu show in Sasebo JapanIn 1927 fossils of an ancient wild cattle Hanaizumi Moriushi Leptobison hanaizumiensis dating from the Paleolithic period about 20 000 years ago were discovered at the Hanaizumi Site in Ichinoseki City Iwate Prefecture The Hanaizumi Moriushi is a species similar to the bison and is said to be close to the steppe bison Bison priscus lineage Fossil bones of Aurochs Bos primigenius have also been found in Ichinoseki City 8 Since Hokkaido and Honshu were land locked with the Eurasian continent during the Ice Age these animals came from the continent via Hokkaido In addition projectile points made from polished wild cattle bones have been found at the same site although in small quantities suggesting that humans existed during this period and that hanaizumi moriushi and aurochs were hunted 8 At the Ohama Site in Goto City Nagasaki Prefecture cattle teeth dating to the middle Yayoi period were excavated 9 Among them were also processed cattle molars However this excavation was controversial because it contradicted the statement in the Wajinden in Chen Shou s Records of the Three Kingdoms that there were no cattle or horses in Japan 10 Later radiocarbon dating of the excavated cattle molars yielded a date of around 40 AD 90 years 11 nbsp Cow shaped haniwa nbsp fullscreen map Wagyu Prefectures1 Miyazaki Prefecture2 Hokkaido3 Kagoshima Prefecture4 Shiga Prefecture5 Miyagi Prefecture6 Gifu Prefecture7 Kumamoto Prefecture8 Hyogo Prefecture9 Kagawa Prefecture However some in the Japanese archaeological community remain skeptical about the presence of cattle in Japan during the Yayoi period and there is a persistent view that they were brought to Japan from the Korean peninsula by the toraijin a group of people who came to Japan in the mid 5th century during the Kofun period At the Nango Ōhigashi site in Gose City Nara Prefecture excavations revealed cow bones believed to date back to the 5th century At the Funamiya Kofun Tumulus late 5th century in Asago City Hyogo Prefecture pieces of a cow shaped haniwa clay figurine believed to be the oldest in Japan have been excavated In addition a cow shaped haniwa was excavated from the Hashida No 1 Tumulus in Tawaramoto Town Shiki gun Nara Prefecture in the first half of the 6th century and was designated as an Important Cultural Property of Japan in 1958 12 On the other hand recent genetic studies have shown that Wagyu and Korean cattle Hanwoo and others differ greatly in their genetic information Livestock cattle are divided into two major lineages northern lineage cattle Bos taurus and Indian lineage cattle Bos indicus and both Wagyu and Korean cattle belong to the northern lineage and do not contain Indian lineage such as Zebu cattle 13 However in terms of mitochondrial DNA sequence haplogroups haplogroup T4 East Asian type is predominant in the Wagyu Japanese Black at about 65 while haplogroup T3 European type is predominant in Korean cattle at 66 83 13 14 T4 is a haplogroup unique to East Asia that is not observed in Near Eastern European and African cattle and T3 is the predominant haplogroup in European cattle but T3 is also predominant in Korean cattle This means that the present breed of Korean cattle is not the main ancestor of the Wagyu In addition haplogroup P has also been detected in about 46 of the Japanese Shorthorn 15 has been detected in many extinct European aurochs but has only been found in a total of three current livestock cattle one Chinese and two Korean out of several thousand individuals in the database The Japanese Shorthorn was created by crossing the Nanbu cattle bred in the former Nanbu Domain territory in northeastern Japan present day Iwate Prefecture with Shorthorns and other breeds imported from the United States but P has not been detected in Shorthorns and is thought to be derived from the Nanbu cattle 15 Fossils of Hanaizumi Moriushi and Aurochs have been found in Iwate Prefecture but it is unclear if the Nanbu cattle were related to these Haplogroup P has also been found in Chinese and Korean cattle but it is extremely rare compared to T4 Therefore it is suggested that the ancestors of the Nanbu cattle have a different origin from the ancestors of the Japanese Black in western Japan where T4 is abundant and that there is no single ancestor of the Wagyu History editCattle were brought to Japan from the Korean Peninsula or China but archaeological and genetic studies have proposed different dates for their arrival ranging from around A D to the 5th century Nara period 710 794 edit In 675 due to the influence of Buddhism Emperor Tenmu issued a decree banning meat eating and eating cattle was officially prohibited in Japan However a study of human excrement excavated from the Heijo Palace site has revealed that Japanese people in the Nara period 710 794 continued to eat cattle even after the prohibition 16 In addition the Yoro Code 757 stipulates that when a government owned horse and ox dies it should be dismembered and the skin brain horns and gall bladder removed and if there is calculus bovis gallstones it should be delivered to the state 17 The Yoro Code also includes provisions for the sale of the hides and meat of horses and cattle and there were distribution channels throughout Japan for buying and selling these items during the Nara period Heian and Kamakura period 794 1333 edit nbsp Swift Bull 13th centuryDuring the Heian period 794 1185 the main use of cattle was for bullock carts Cattle that excelled in this use were called sun gyu 駿牛 swift bulls and were regarded as excellent bulls Owning such an excellent bull became a source of pride for the aristocrats of Japan at that time The Pictorial Record of Swift Bulls 駿牛絵詞 which is believed to have been written around 1279 is said to be the world s oldest specialized book on bulls 18 In the same book the names of 52 bulls are listed as swift bulls At the time the cattle from Iki Island in present day Nagasaki Prefecture had the highest reputation as swift bulls but they were temporarily destroyed by the Mongolian army during the Mongolian invasion which killed them and used them as food From the Kamakura period 1185 1333 to the Muromachi period 1336 1573 farming using cattle and horses became popular mainly in western Japan contributing greatly to the development of agriculture In a complaint by a farmer in 1423 describing the wrongdoing of a manor administrator the fact that the farmer owned cattle and used them for farming is mentioned 19 Edo period 1603 1867 edit nbsp Wagyu depicted in Ukiyo e From The Sixty nine Stations of the Kiso Kaidō by Hiroshige Utagawa Until about the time of the Meiji Restoration in 1868 cattle were used only as draught animals in agriculture forestry mining and for transport and as a source of fertilizer Milk consumption was unknown and for cultural and religious reasons meat was not eaten Cattle were highly prized and valuable too expensive for a poor farmer to buy 1 2 Japan was effectively isolated from the rest of the world from 1635 until 1854 there was no possibility of the intromission of foreign genes to the cattle population during this time In western Japan during the Edo period 1603 1867 superior cattle were produced by aggressive inbreeding and the superior bloodlines were called tsuru 蔓 lit vine and cattle with superior bloodlines tsuru ushi lit vine cattle were traded at high prices 20 Famous tsuru include the Takenotani tsuru Okayama Prefecture Bokura tsuru Shimane Prefecture Iwakura tsuru Hiroshima Prefecture and Shusuke tsuru Hyogo Prefecture In Japan where meat eating was frowned upon and the use of milk was not widespread cows in the Edo period were basically work cattle that plowed the fields so a good cow in this period meant one that was healthy and obedient nbsp Image of tsuru and tsuru ushi The famous Tajiri go bull was born from the Atsuta tsuru which is a descendant of the Shusuke tsuru According to a survey conducted by the Japan Wagyu Registry Association the pedigree was traced from a database of 718 969 Japanese black cattle mothers registered in Japan and it was found that 718 330 or 99 9 of them are descended from the Tajiri go 21 On the other hand there are those who are concerned about the current situation in which only the Tajima cattle line represented by the Tajiri go is spreading and genetic diversity is being lost from Wagyu and the movement to revive the Takenotani tsuru has been attracting attention in recent years 22 In 1859 Japan opened the port of Yokohama in accordance with the demands of Western nations At the same time a foreign settlement was established in Yokohama Foreign residents sought cattle for meat from neighboring villages but were refused so cattle were imported from the U S China and Korea which gradually became unable to meet the demand In 1865 before the Port of Kobe was opened the Hyogo Port Opening Demand Incident occurred in which nine warships from Britain France the Netherlands and the United States invaded Hyogo Port demanding its opening At that time sailors negotiated with local cattle merchants for cattle which were initially slaughtered on board but as demand increased it became necessary to slaughter them on land 1866 saw the first slaughter of cattle by foreigners in the pine forests of Cape Wadamisaki 23 In this way foreign ships bought 30 or 40 cows at a time in Kobe before the port opened and brought them to Yokohama where Kobe beef actually Tajima beef became well known for its delicious taste 23 Modern times edit nbsp Ukiyo e depicting the Port of Kobe after its openingIn January 1868 when the new port of Kobe opened east of the Hyogo Port the Kobe foreign settlement was established In 1868 Englishman Edward Charles Kirby established the first slaughterhouse in Kobe and in 1869 a sukiyaki restaurant called Gekka tei opened in Kobe 23 24 According to a newspaper article in 1875 Kobe was the first place where meat eating was popular with 800 cows slaughtered in a month Next was Yokohama with 600 followed by Tokyo with 500 and Osaka and Nagoya with 300 25 The reputation of Wagyu beef as having a superior taste spread from the residents of the foreign settlement to the Japanese and it was written in books of the time that Wagyu beef has a better taste than foreign beef 26 and there has never been beef as good as Kobe s beef 27 At the same time however it was also believed that Wagyu were superior to Western breeds for plowing use but inferior in milk and meat production and their improvement was urgently needed 28 Between 1868 the year of the Meiji Restoration and 1887 some 2600 foreign cattle were imported 1 7 At first there was little interest in cross breeding these with the native stock but from about 1900 it became widespread In 1900 the Japanese government established a committee to investigate the improvement of cattle breeding and began a systematic crossbreeding program between Wagyu and Western breeds The Ayrshire and Simmental breeds were imported first followed by the Brown Swiss but few people wanted to crossbreed with them because of their large size and the Japanese government encouraged it but the crossbreds were very unpopular 29 The crossbreds oversized stature made them inconvenient for Japan s narrow arable land and their movements were slow and sluggish and their temperaments were rough and lacking in obedience They also had poor meat quality and were condemned from all quarters as being unsuitable for sukiyaki 29 As a result from around 1907 there were no more crossbreds being bred and in reaction the old black cattle were considered good and as long as they were small and black they could be sold 29 As crossbreeding with Western breeds progressed the term pure Wagyu 純粋和牛 junsui Wagyu 30 31 emerged to describe native Japanese cattle and by 1912 it was claimed that there were two definitions of Wagyu pure Wagyu and improved Wagyu 改良和牛 kairyō Wagyu 32 At the time Mendel s laws had just been rediscovered and both the Japanese government and cattle farmers lacked sufficient knowledge of genetics The unpopularity of crossbred cattle led to the Japanese government s decision in 1911 to suspend plans to purchase Brown Swiss and Simmental cattle In 1912 the Japanese government decided to formally end its policy of encouraging crossbreeding by announcing that crossbreeding between Wagyu and European breeds had been sufficiently successful 33 From then on Wagyu improvement was based on pure Wagyu and improved Wagyu crossbred cattle nbsp Fukutomi go one of the first Improved Japanese Breeds to win the first prize 1912 In October 1912 when the 6th Chugoku Six Prefectures United Livestock Breeders Show was held in Himeji City Hyogo Prefecture two crossbred bulls won the first prize as Improved Japanese Breeds 改良和種 kairyō washu and the name Improved Japanese Breed came into use thereafter 34 Thereafter organized breeding efforts to increase the number of superior Wagyu cattle began According to a survey conducted in 1914 there were 61 different breeds of Wagyu in Japan at that time including Tajima cattle Iwaizumi cattle Mishima cattle Aso cattle and others 35 However these were not actual breeds but only names of regional classifications In the case of Hyogo Prefecture the leading producer of Wagyu cattle Kobe cattle and Tajima cattle at that time the number of stud bulls owned by breed as of 1914 was as follows Number of stud bulls owned in Hyogo Prefecture by breed 1914 36 National Prefectural Publicly owned Private TotalAyrshire Breed 30 5 17 52Ayrshire Crossbreed 11 11Brown Swiss Breed 5 5Brown Swiss Crossbreed 4 4Holstein Breed 18 18Holstein Crossbreed 23 23Jersey Crossbreed 1 1Improved Japanese Breed 1 13 57 2 73Japanese Breed 71 16 87Total 1 52 133 88 274Even after the Meiji era when hybrid cattle were encouraged there were still a considerable number of pure Wagyu cattle remaining in the Taisho era 1912 1926 As a policy for the improvement of Wagyu efforts were made to eliminate negative characteristics of hybrid cattle as much as possible Specifically the elimination of sudare tiger stripes nori kuchi grayish white lips unagi sen different fur color on the dorsal line white spots etc 37 On the other hand both pure and improved Wagyu cattle strived to improve their physique and weight and from around the 1920s the term improved Wagyu came to refer to all Wagyu cattle including not only improved Wagyu but also pure Wagyu Around 1919 the examination and registration of Wagyu began mainly in western Japan and pedigrees and body types began to be registered Nine breeds were registered Tajima Bisaku Hiroshima Bocho Shimane Inhaku Bungo Kumamoto and Kagoshima 38 However the examination and registration process was carried out by each prefecture and the criteria for examination varied Around 1925 the results of the improvements became visible the negative characteristics of crossbreeding had almost disappeared from Wagyu cattle and their size and weight had increased and improvements in hindquarters were clearly visible nbsp Tajiri go a famous bull of the Japanese blackIn 1937 when the former Japan Livestock Industry Association became the central organization for the registration of cattle throughout Japan the breed names of Japanese Black Japanese Polled and Japanese Brown were created in place of the above nine breeds nbsp Japanese brownIn 1944 it was officially decided to abolish the conventional name Improved Japanese Breed and call the breeds Japanese Black Japanese Brown and Japanese Polled as the characteristics of each breed had been clarified as a result of improvements 39 This meant that the three crossbreeds were recognized as fixed breeds Then in 1957 the Japanese Shorthorn was added They are collectively known as Wagyu The Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade GATT from 1986 to 1994 which set rules for liberalization of international trade decided to liberalize imports of foreign beef to Japan Beef imports have been liberalized since 1991 In FY1993 beef imports jumped 34 over the previous year and as a result Japan s beef self sufficiency rate dropped below 50 40 The liberalization of beef imports has brought about changes in Japan s domestic Wagyu beef production system In order to compete with cheaper foreign beef Japanese livestock farmers have become more biased toward raising the Japanese Black breed which has a unique marbling characteristic As a result the number of the other three Wagyu breeds has decreased Following the outbreak of Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy BSE in Japan the Law for Special Measures Concerning the Management and Relay of Information for Individual Identification of Cattle Beef Traceability Law was enacted in 2003 This law stipulates the attachment of ear marks to cattle the notification recording and storage of historical information from birth to beef and the publication of recorded information on the Internet In other words it is possible to trace the history of all Japanese beef sold in Japan 41 Breeds and brands editBreeds edit source source source source source source source Wagyu grazing videoWagyu edit Most of today s Wagyu are improved Wagyu 改良和牛 kairyō wagyu that have been fixed as breeds through crossbreeding with foreign breeds There are four breeds of improved Wagyu as follows 42 66 43 420 44 The Japanese Black 黒毛和種 kuroge washu which constitutes over 97 of beef cattle in Japan 6 regional strains within the breed include the Tottori Tajima Shimane and Okayama 45 The Japanese Brown or Japanese Red 褐毛和種 akage washu or akaushi the other main breed representing about 5 of all beef cattle 46 17 reared in southern Japan in Kōchi Prefecture on Shikoku island and in Kumamoto Prefecture on Kyushu island 1 8 45 The Japanese Polled 無角和種 mukaku washu found principally in Yamaguchi Prefecture 1 8 The Japanese Shorthorn 日本短角和種 nihon tankaku washu reared in northern Japan mainly in Iwate Prefecture it constitutes less than one percent of all wagyu cattle 47 Native Wagyu edit Native Wagyu 在来和牛 zairai wagyu are cattle from ancient Japan that have not been crossbred with foreign breeds It is also called Japanese breed pure Japanese breed pure Wagyu etc There are two breeds of native Wagyu as follows Mishima cattle Kuchinoshima cattleBrands edit nbsp Kobe beef nbsp Kobe beef certificateToday each region in Japan has its own brand of Wagyu beef numbering more than 320 48 The first Wagyu beef to gain a reputation was Kobe beef already famous since the 1860s and known to foreign countries through foreign residents 49 50 Ōmi beef also had a reputation since the Meiji era 1868 1912 for its delicious taste 51 In the Taisho era 1912 1926 Matsusaka beef also became well known 52 These were originally Tajima cattle and calves were purchased from the Tajima region fattened in each region and then sold In the Tokyo area Yonezawa beef has also been known since the Meiji era 50 Since the 1980s Wagyu beef branding has been promoted in various regions of Japan However the Japanese Trademark Law at the time did not allow for the establishment of regional collective trademarks which posed a problem in terms of legal protection Before the Beef Traceability Law 2003 was enacted there were also issues regarding the verification of the origin breeding location and distribution of Wagyu beef In 2006 the Japanese Trademark Law was amended to recognize regional collective trademarks allowing Wagyu beef to be registered as a regional brand In 2014 the Geographical Indications Law was passed and the operation of Geographical Indications GI protection began in 2015 Currently the GI registered brands of Wagyu beef are as follows 53 Tajima Beef Tajima beef is beef from the Tajima region of Hyogo Prefecture and has a history of about 1 200 years 54 Kobe Beef Kobe Beef is a brand given to the highest quality beef from Hyogo Prefecture s Tajima cattle and has a history of about 170 years 55 Special Matsusaka Beef Special Matsuzaka Beef Tokusan Matsusaka Ushi is a brand given to the highest quality virgin female beef from the Matsuzaka region of Mie Prefecture The Matsusaka beef brand has a history of about 100 years 56 Yonezawa Beef Yonezawa Beef Yonezawa Gyu is beef from virgin Japanese black female cattle in the Okitama region of Yamagata Prefecture and has a history of about 150 years 57 Maesawa Beef Maesawa Beef is a brand given to the highest quality beef from the Maesawa area of Iwate Prefecture and has a history of about 70 years 58 Miyazaki Beef Miyazaki Beef is a brand of wagyu beef from Miyazaki Prefecture and has often won the Wagyu Olympics in recent years 59 Ōmi Beef Ōmi Beef is a wagyu beef brand from Shiga Prefecture with a history of about 400 years 60 Kagoshima Black Beef Kagoshima Black Beef Kagoshima Kuroushi is a wagyu beef brand from Kagoshima Prefecture that won the recent Wagyu Olympics 61 Kumamoto Red Beef Kumamoto Red Beef Kuamoto Akaushi is a wagyu beef from Kumamoto Prefecture characterized by its lean meat 62 Hiba Beef Hiba Beef is a brand of Japanese black cattle from Shobara City Hiroshima Prefecture with a history dating back to the Edo period 63 Hida Beef Hida Beef is a Japanese beef from Gifu Prefecture and has a history of about 100 years 64 Olive Fed Wagyu Beef Olive Fed Wagyu Beef is a brand of Japanese black cattle that is fed olives It is one of the rarest beef in the world 65 Characteristics of Wagyu beef edit nbsp Wagyu beef marblingOne of the primary characteristics of Wagyu beef is the fine marbling of fat within the red meat known as sashi and the high ratio of intramuscular fat However of the four Wagyu breeds only the Japanese Black breed has this characteristic while the other three breeds do not have a high degree of marbling The degree of marbling varies depending on sex castration and fattening method but in the case of the Japanese Black it is thought that genes play a major role 66 This characteristic of marbled meat is also found in the Mishima cattle a native Wagyu breed 67 However this characteristic is not seen in the Kuchinoshima cattle which are also a native Wagyu breed In addition it is the Tajima cattle strain among the Japanese Black cattle that tend to have marbled meat while the Takenotani tsuru strain in Okayama Prefecture for example is characterized by rather red meat 68 The fat content of the Japanese Black breed is known for its high content of monounsaturated fatty acids e g oleic acid 69 Generally the melting point of beef fat is 40 50 degrees Celsius but monounsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point so the melting point of Wagyu beef fat is below that of butter around 30 degrees Celsius Therefore the fat melts at body temperature as soon as it is put in the mouth and this is thought to be one of the main reasons for the tender melt in your mouth texture that is unique to Wagyu beef Wagyu beef especially Japanese black beef is known to have a unique sweet aroma called Wagyu beef aroma which is thought to be caused by complex compounds such as lactones 70 Lactones which are also found in peaches and coconuts are more abundant in Wagyu beef and their aroma increases when the beef is heated Wagyu beef grades editBeef grades indicate the quality of the meat and in Japan they are determined based on the Beef Carcass Trade Standards established with the approval of the Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Two grades are used to determine the rating one is the yield grade and the other is the meat quality grade The yield grade is divided into three grades A B and C with the highest grade being A The meat quality grade is divided into five grades 5 4 3 2 and 1 with the highest grade being 5 Beef is graded in a total of 15 ways A1 to A5 B1 to B5 and C1 to C5 combining the two grades with A5 indicating the highest quality in both yield and meat quality grades The yield grade refers to the percentage of edible meat in a cow The meat quality grade is determined by four criteria marbling meat color meat firmness and texture and fat luster and quality 71 Beef Grades Yield Grade Meat Quality Grade5 4 3 2 1A A5 A4 A3 A2 A1B B5 B4 B3 B2 B1C C5 C4 C3 C2 C1International Wagyu editInternational Wagyu is regulated and promoted through the World Wagyu Council 72 Australia edit nbsp A Wagyu bull in AustraliaThe Australian Wagyu Association is the largest breed association outside Japan 73 Both fullblood and Wagyu cross cattle are farmed in Australia for domestic and overseas markets including Taiwan China Canada Hong Kong Singapore Malaysia Indonesia the U K France Germany Denmark and the U S 74 Australian Wagyu cattle are grain fed for the last 300 500 days of production citation needed Wagyu bred in Western Australia s Margaret River region often have red wine added to their feed as well 75 United States edit In the United States some Japanese Wagyu cattle are cross bred with American Angus stock Meat from this cross breed is marketed as American Style Kobe Beef 76 or Wangus 77 although many American retailers simply inaccurately refer to it as Wagyu Wagyu were first competitively exhibited at the National Western Stock Show in 2012 78 Other U S Wagyu breeders have full blooded animals directly descended from original Japanese bloodlines that are registered through the American Wagyu Association 79 Canada edit Wagyu cattle farming in Canada appeared after 1991 when the Canadian Wagyu Association was formed Wagyu style cattle and farms in Canada are located in Alberta 80 Saskatchewan 81 Ontario 82 Quebec 83 British Columbia 84 Prince Edward Island 85 and Newfoundland and Labrador 86 Canadian Wagyu beef products are exported to the US including Hawaii Australia New Zealand and Europe 85 United Kingdom edit In 2008 a herd of Wagyu cattle was imported to North Yorkshire first becoming available for consumption in 2011 87 Since 2011 there have been Wagyu herds in Scotland 88 89 90 91 92 There are British amp Irish Wagyu Fullbloods registered through the British Wagyu Breeders Association 93 Notes edit a b c d e Kiyoshi Namikawa 2016 1992 Breeding history of Japanese beef cattle and preservation of genetic resources as economic farm animals Kyoto Wagyu Registry Association Accessed January 2017 Kim Jack Houston Irene Anna The rarest steak in the world can cost over 300 Here s why wagyu beef is so expensive Business Insider Retrieved 26 May 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Gotoh Takafumi July 2018 The Japanese Wagyu beef industry current situation and future prospects A review Asian Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences 31 7 942 47 doi 10 5713 ajas 18 0333 PMC 6039323 PMID 29973029 S2CID 49693378 via Science Citation Index Ogino Mizuna Matsuura Akihiro Yamazaki Atusi Irimajiri Mami Takahashi Hideyuki Komatsu Tokushi Kushibiki Shiro Shingu Hiroyuki Kasuya Etsuko 17 January 2013 Biological rhythms related to metabolism in Japanese Shorthorn cattle under varying environments and management techniques Animal Science Journal 84 6 513 26 doi 10 1111 asj 12029 ISSN 1344 3941 PMID 23607269 Higuchi Mikito Shiba Nobuya Imanri Mai Yonai Miharu Watanabe Akira 1 April 2018 Effects of Grazing or Exercise in the Middle of the Fattening Period on the Growth and Carcass Traits of Japanese Shorthorn Steers Japan Agricultural Research Quarterly 52 2 163 72 doi 10 6090 jarq 52 163 ISSN 0021 3551 a b Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries August 2019 肉用牛の改良増殖をめぐる情勢 The Situation Concerning the Improvement and Propagation of Beef Cattle PDF Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries in Japanese Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 12 January 2024 a b Japan External Trade Organization 2023 a b Kurosawa 2008 p 29 Sakazume 1964 pp 6 10 Fukuda 1998 p 7 Fukuda 1998 p 58 Kimine 2017 a b Mannen et al 2004 Kim et al 2016 a b Noda et al 2018 Imai Kōki 1 December 2013 天平人の腹をさぐる To search the belly of the Tenpyo people Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties in Japanese Nara National Research Institute for Cultural Properties Retrieved 21 August 2023 Matsui Akira 2009 肉食の忌避という虚構 動物考古学からの視点 The Fiction of Meat Eating Avoidance A View from Zooarchaeology in Japanese The Japanese Society of Cultural Anthropology doi 10 14890 jasca 2009 0 4 0 Retrieved 21 August 2023 Onsen Town History Editorial Committee 1984 p 413 Onsen Town History Editorial Committee 1984 p 440 Habu 1948 p 1 The Father of Japanese Black Cattle Identified Asahi Shimbun March 2 2012 First shipment of Takenotani Tsuru a Japanese black breed Tsuyama Asahi Shimbun February 8 2022 a b c Kobe City 1924 p 54 Ochiai amp Arii 1967 pp 85 86 Ochiai amp Arii 1967 p 86 Dainippon Fisheries Association 1886 p 20 Nōbi 1897 p 90 Agricultural Bureau of Agriculture and Commerce 1884 p 164 a b c Habu 1950 p 3 Tengu 1901 p 27 Tanahashi 1911 p 53 Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce 1912 p 78 Animal Husbandry Bureau Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries 1966 p 308 Ban 1912 p 45 Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce 1918 p 1 Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce 1915 p 307 Animal Husbandry Bureau Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries 1966 p 314 Sato 1934 p 1636 Dairy Jijo sha 1944 p 46 Tsuchiya Keizō October 1994 ウルグアイ ラウンド合意と肉牛経営 Uruguay Round Agreement and Beef Cattle Management Monthly Report Information on Livestock Production in Japanese No 61 Agriculture amp Livestock Industries Corporation Retrieved 13 January 2024 Service of individual identification information of cattle National Livestock Breeding Center National Livestock Breeding Center 19 January 2018 Retrieved 13 January 2024 Valerie Porter Lawrence Alderson Stephen J G Hall D Phillip Sponenberg 2016 Mason s World Encyclopedia of Livestock Breeds and Breeding sixth edition Wallingford CABI ISBN 9781780647944 T Muramoto M Higashiyama T Kondo 2005 Effect of pasture finishing on beef quality of Japanese Black steers Asian Australian Journal of Animal Science 18 420 426 What Is Wagyu Japan Meat Information Service Center Archived 22 October 2013 a b Wagyu Cattle Stillwater Oklahoma Oklahoma State University Department of Animal and Food Sciences Archived 27 October 2022 National Institute of Agrobiological Sciences 2005 Country Report Japan annex to The State of the World s Animal Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture Rome Commission on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations ISBN 9789251057629 Archived 29 July 2022 Kazuto Motegi 1 October 2009 Japanese Shorthorn Cattle A Rare Breed Native to Northern Japan Tokyo Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research Archived 27 October 2022 Please tell us about the brands of beef Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries of Japan 1 Gakuno sha 1884 p 283 a b Pastoral Magazine 1892 p 9 Kaneko 1897 p 158 Ochi 1925 p 135 Please tell us about brand names of beef Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries 2021 Retrieved 25 September 2023 Tajima Gyu Tajima Beef Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Kobe Beef Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Tokusan Matsusaka Ushi Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Yonezawa Gyu Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Maesawa Gyu Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Miyazaki Beef Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Omi Ushi Omi Gyu Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Kagoshima Kuroushi Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Kumamoto Akaushi Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Hiba Gyu Information Website on Japan s Geographical Indications Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 25 October 2023 Hida beef from Gifu Prefecture has been registered as a Geographical Indication GI in Japanese Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries 31 January 2023 Retrieved 25 October 2023 I tried a top grade 240 Olive Wagyu steak to see if it s worth the money CNBC 17 May 2019 Retrieved 2 February 2024 T Gotoh E Albrecht F Teuscher K Kawabata K Sakashita H Iwamoto J Wegner 2009 Differences in muscle and fat accretion in Japanese Black and European cattle Meat Science 82 3 300 308 doi 10 1016 j meatsci 2009 01 026 Kono 2013 p 60 幻の和牛 竹の谷蔓牛 を導入 幕別の法人 Introducing TakenoTani Tsuru Cattle a fantastic Japanese cattle Tokachi Mainichi Shimbun in Japanese 2 December 2018 Retrieved 24 September 2023 Zembayashi M et al 1995 Kazuaki Yoshinaga et al 2021 特集2 牛肉 1 Special Feature 2 Beef 1 in Japanese Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries Retrieved 23 January 2024 World Wagyu Council https worldwagyucouncil com a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code website code help Australian Wagyu Forum australianwagyuforum com au Archived from the original on 10 April 2013 Exports wagyu org au Australian Wagyu Association Archived from the original on 10 March 2011 Wine Fed Wagyu mrpme com au Margaret River Premium Meat Exports Archived from the original on 25 January 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2021 U S ranches breed famous Kobe style beef The Japan Times Associated Press 12 August 2011 p 3 Archived from the original on 28 August 2011 Retrieved 19 November 2021 Houston Jack 2 August 2019 The rarest steak in the world can cost over 300 Business Insider Several US restaurants are serving hybrid wangus beef from domestically raised wagyu and Angus cows Raabe Steve 11 January 2012 Tender Wagyu muscles onto meat scene makes stock show exhibition debut The Denver Post Archived from the original on 13 January 2012 Registration DNA Tests American Wagyu Association wagyu org Archived from the original on 1 October 2017 Retrieved 6 May 2018 Spurr Bill 22 July 2014 Kobe beef on P E I Veterinarian raising wagyu cattle The Chronicle Herald Archived from the original on 6 December 2014 Retrieved 19 November 2021 Sciarpelletti Laura 24 December 2020 Saskatchewan Prairie farmers using high end Wagyu genetics to create snow beef CBC ca Retrieved 19 November 2021 Kuntz First to Breed Wagyu in Ontario thepost on ca Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 19 November 2021 Accueil Eleveurs Wagyu Wagyu Breeders wagyuquebec com Retrieved 29 November 2019 Arstad Steve 28 May 2020 This Princeton grown beef is some of the rarest most prized in the world infotel ca iNFOnews Ltd Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b About Us CanadianWagyu ca Archived from the original on 11 October 2013 New World Beef NewWorldBeef ca New World Beef Retrieved 12 November 2021 Wainwright Martin 7 February 2008 World s dearest beef to be sold in Yorkshire The Guardian Archived from the original on 11 October 2017 Retrieved 11 October 2017 Try a little tenderness on the farm with Scotland s Wagyu cattle The Herald 19 November 2012 Archived from the original on 13 April 2013 Retrieved 19 November 2012 Scottish farm to make Japanese Wagyu beef The Scotsman Archived from the original on 30 July 2013 Retrieved 29 July 2013 Highland Wagyu beef firm in expansion drive bbc co uk BBC News 29 July 2013 Archived from the original on 1 August 2013 Retrieved 29 July 2013 Perthshire the Wagyu centre of Europe thescottishfarmer co uk The Scottish Farmer Archived from the original on 10 August 2014 Retrieved 1 August 2013 Spreading the wagyu message thescottishfarmer co uk 18 July 2017 Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 18 July 2017 British Wagyu Breeders Association https www britishwagyu co uk a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a External link in code class cs1 code website code help References edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wagyu Agricultural Bureau of Agriculture and Commerce ed 1884 畜産諮詢会紀事 Livestock Advisory Board Bulletin in Japanese Agricultural Bureau of Agriculture and Commerce doi 10 11501 841936 Gakuno sha ed 1884 雑報 general news Agriculture Magazine in Japanese No 207 doi 10 11501 1597967 Dainippon Fisheries Association ed 1886 大日本水産会報告 Report of the Dainippon Fisheries Association in Japanese Dainippon Fisheries Association doi 10 11501 1761390 Pastoral Magazine ed 1892 東京府下屠獣状況 Slaughterhouse Situation in Tokyo Pastoral Magazine in Japanese No 85 Pastoral Magazine doi 10 11501 11209674 Nōbi Shigeyoshi 1897 神戸の花 Flowers of Kobe in Japanese Meiki sha doi 10 11501 765678 Kaneko Sahei ed 1897 東京新繁昌記 Tokyo New Prosperity Report in Japanese Publisher of the Tokyo New Prosperity Report doi 10 11501 764130 Tengu Bokudo 1901 牧牛方言 承前 Pastoral cattle dialect sequel Livestock Magazine 194 in Japanese Livestock Magazine Inc doi 10 11501 11209790 Tanahashi Noboru 1911 牛の涎 畜産講話 Cattle Drool Lectures on Animal Husbandry in Japanese Kinran sha doi 10 11501 841594 Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce ed 1912 道庁府県畜産主任及種畜場長協議会要録 第3回 Summary of the Meeting of Prefectural Chiefs of Livestock Production and Directors of Livestock Breederies No 3 in Japanese Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce doi 10 11501 841977 Ban Higashi ed 1912 肉と乳 Meat and Milk in Japanese Vol 3 Association for the Promotion of Meat Eating doi 10 11501 3560124 Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce ed 1915 道庁府県畜産主任及種畜場長協議会要録 第7回 Summary of the Meeting of Prefectural Chiefs of Livestock Production and Directors of Livestock Breederies No 7 in Japanese Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce doi 10 11501 936344 Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce ed 1918 和牛ニ関スル調査 Survey on Wagyu in Japanese Agricultural Bureau of the Ministry of Agriculture and Commerce doi 10 11501 942456 Kobe City ed 1924 神戸市史 本編各説 Kobe City History Commentary on the main volume in Japanese Kobe City doi 10 11501 965720 Ochi Kiyo 1925 家庭栄養日本料理 Home Nutrition Japanese Cooking in Japanese Hoshino Shoten doi 10 11501 970355 Sato Kanji ed 1934 農業大辞典 Dictionary of Agriculture in Japanese Vol 2 Nippon Hyoron sha doi 10 11501 1716740 Dairy Jijo sha ed 1944 全國農業會の畜産部長會議 Livestock department manager meeting of the National Agricultural Society Dairy Farming Situation in Japanese Vol 5 no 4 5 Dairy Jijo sha doi 10 11501 2317074 Habu Yoshitaka 1948 蔓の造成とつる牛 Vine Creation and Vine Cattle in Japanese Sangyō Tosho doi 10 11501 1155428 Habu Yoshitaka 1950 和牛 Wagyu in Japanese Federation of Animal Husbandry Technology doi 10 11501 11578209 Sakazume Nakao 1964 長崎県大浜遺跡の発掘調査概要 Summary of Excavation at the Ohama Site Nagasaki Prefecture Report on the Cultural Properties of Nagasaki Prefecture Vol 2 Report on the Survey of the Goto Site 1962 1963 in Japanese Nagasaki Prefectural Board of Education doi 10 11501 2476211 Animal Husbandry Bureau Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries ed 1966 畜産発達史 本篇 History of Livestock Production Main Edition in Japanese Chu ōkōron Jigyō Shuppan doi 10 11501 1698260 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names editors list link Ochiai Shigenobu Arii Hajime 1967 神戸史話 Stories of Kobe History in Japanese Sōgen sha doi 10 11501 2995301 Onsen Town History Editorial Committee ed October 1984 温泉町史 Onsen Town History in Japanese Vol 1 Onsen Town doi 10 11501 9575639 Zembayashi M Nishimura K Lunt DK Smith SB 1995 Effect of breed type and sex on the fatty acid composition of subcutaneous and intramuscular lipids of finishing steers and heifers J Anim Sci 73 11 3325 32 doi 10 2527 1995 73113325x PMID 8586591 Fukuda Kazushi 31 March 1998 大浜遺跡 Ohama Site Report on the Survey of Cultural Properties in Nagasaki Prefecture in Japanese Vol 141 Nagasaki Prefectural Board of Education doi 10 24484 sitereports 46422 Mannen H Kohno M Nagata Y Tsuji S Gradley DG Yeo JS Nyamsamba D Zagdsuren Y Yokohama M Nomura K Amano T August 2004 Independent mitochondrial origin and historical genetic differentiation in North Eastern Asian cattle Mol Phylogenet Evol 32 2 539 44 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2004 01 010 PMID 15223036 Kurosawa Yaetsu 25 March 2008 モノが語る牛と人間の文化2 岩手の牛たち Cattle and Human Culture through Objects 2 Cattle in Iwate PDF LIAJ news in Japanese No 109 Livestock Improvement Association of Japan JPNO 00080827 Retrieved 18 August 2023 Kono Tomohiro 2013 最新のゲノム解析から探る和牛肉質のルーツ The Roots of Wagyu Beef Meat Quality Explored by the Latest Genome Analysis Academic Trends in Japanese 18 4 58 61 doi 10 5363 tits 18 4 58 Kim JH Lee SS Kim SC Choi SB Kim SH Lee CW Jung KS Kim ES Choi YS Kim SB Kim WH Cho CY May 2016 Haplogroup Classification of Korean Cattle Breeds Based on Sequence Variations of mtDNA Control Region Asian Australas J Anim Sci 29 5 624 30 doi 10 5713 ajas 15 0692 PMC 4852222 PMID 26954229 Kimine Osamu 29 September 2017 文献と埴輪 壁画資料から見た牛甘 飼 ー牽牛織女説話の伝来年代を含めてー A Study on Ushikai based on Bibliographic Material and Haniwa Tomb Murals Including a discussion on the introduction of the legend of the cowherd and the weaver girl to Japan Human and Socio environmental Studies in Japanese Graduate School of Human and Socio Environmental Studies Kanazawa University 34 77 98 Noda A Yonesaka R Sasazaki S Mannen H 5 January 2018 The mtDNA haplogroup P of modern Asian cattle A genetic legacy of Asian aurochs PLOS ONE 13 1 e0190937 e0190937 Bibcode 2018PLoSO 1390937N doi 10 1371 journal pone 0190937 PMC 5755918 PMID 29304129 Kazuaki Yoshinaga Arisa Tago Aya Yoshinaga Kiriake Naohiro Gotoh 2021 Characterization of lactones in Wagyu Japanese beef and imported beef by combining solvent extraction and gas chromatography mass spectrometry LWT 135 doi 10 1016 j lwt 2020 110015 S2CID 224847982 Japan External Trade Organization 2023 Wagyu Japan External Trade Organization Retrieved 8 September 2023 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wagyu amp oldid 1207410899, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.