Chinese Black Pied
Chinese Black Pied cattle are China's black-and-white dairy cattle, developed mainly from Holstein-Friesian and other imported dairy stock crossed with local cows. The name has been used alongside Chinese Black-and-White and, in many modern contexts, Chinese Holstein. Animals have the familiar black pied coat, a dairy frame, and regional differences shaped by climate, feed resources, and breeding history. The population was built to supply milk around growing cities and later became central to large-scale dairy development.
Care and selection resemble Holstein management, but local adaptation matters in a country with cold northern winters, hot summers, and varied housing systems. Productive herds depend on balanced rations, milking hygiene, hoof care, and heat abatement where needed. Because the label can cover registered animals, regional lines, and graded-up Holstein crosses, buyers and breeders should check production records and ancestry. Conservation interest lies less in rarity than in maintaining cattle that fit Chinese farm conditions rather than only imported genetics.
Colors: Belted, Black, Black and White, Blaze Faced, Blue Roan, Brindle, Brockle Faced, Brown, Brown and White, Dun, Gray, Grey, Highbelt, Highpark, Lineback, Mottled, Pied, Red, Red and White, Red Roan, Riggit, Roan, Silver, Solid Black, Solid Red, Solid White, Speckled, Spotted, White, White Faced, Yellow