Milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility, including age at first calving, on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation.

Dairy farmers do not recoup the rearing costs incurred from birth to first calving until second lactation but varying proportions of first lactation cows are removed from the herd before second calving. Herein, we used milk recording data to examine the outcomes and performance of first lactation co...

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Main Authors: Emma N Taylor, Kulwant Channa, James Hanks, Nick M Taylor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2024-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0297657
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author Emma N Taylor
Kulwant Channa
James Hanks
Nick M Taylor
author_facet Emma N Taylor
Kulwant Channa
James Hanks
Nick M Taylor
author_sort Emma N Taylor
collection DOAJ
description Dairy farmers do not recoup the rearing costs incurred from birth to first calving until second lactation but varying proportions of first lactation cows are removed from the herd before second calving. Herein, we used milk recording data to examine the outcomes and performance of first lactation cows to gain insight into farmer decisions to keep or remove them from the herd. An InterHerd+ dataset derived from 500 milk recording dairy herds in UK was used to examine first lactation cows which calved in 2020. Of 29,128 first lactation cows that calved in 2020, 82.6% remained within the herd and re-calved, 4.9% conceived but exited the herd before re-calving, 6.0% were served but exited the herd after failing to conceive and 6.6% exited the herd without being served. The fertility data on these cows support the logical conclusion that farmers retain cows that are served and conceive sooner, possibly in order to keep within a broadly seasonal calving pattern. Cows which were served but not conceived had a median AFC 16-20 days greater than the median AFC for those that conceived. Farmers may also be retaining cows with relatively high milk yields and lower somatic cell counts, or these parameters may be an indicator of a range of attributes affecting the farmer's decision. The data also suggest that farmers are rearing more replacements than required, because over one third of the cows removed in first lactation are never served, and 70% of these are sold within 120 days post-partum. These cows had a significantly older median age at first calving of 818 days, but their early removal without serving suggests there is an oversupply of replacements forcing farmers to dispose of these cows early in lactation. In order to develop a deeper understanding of herd turnover and replacement, future work could examine cow removals in lactation 2 onwards.
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spelling doaj.art-d72f109864ca4382a78a0644eed09d7f2024-02-04T05:31:19ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032024-01-01191e029765710.1371/journal.pone.0297657Milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility, including age at first calving, on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation.Emma N TaylorKulwant ChannaJames HanksNick M TaylorDairy farmers do not recoup the rearing costs incurred from birth to first calving until second lactation but varying proportions of first lactation cows are removed from the herd before second calving. Herein, we used milk recording data to examine the outcomes and performance of first lactation cows to gain insight into farmer decisions to keep or remove them from the herd. An InterHerd+ dataset derived from 500 milk recording dairy herds in UK was used to examine first lactation cows which calved in 2020. Of 29,128 first lactation cows that calved in 2020, 82.6% remained within the herd and re-calved, 4.9% conceived but exited the herd before re-calving, 6.0% were served but exited the herd after failing to conceive and 6.6% exited the herd without being served. The fertility data on these cows support the logical conclusion that farmers retain cows that are served and conceive sooner, possibly in order to keep within a broadly seasonal calving pattern. Cows which were served but not conceived had a median AFC 16-20 days greater than the median AFC for those that conceived. Farmers may also be retaining cows with relatively high milk yields and lower somatic cell counts, or these parameters may be an indicator of a range of attributes affecting the farmer's decision. The data also suggest that farmers are rearing more replacements than required, because over one third of the cows removed in first lactation are never served, and 70% of these are sold within 120 days post-partum. These cows had a significantly older median age at first calving of 818 days, but their early removal without serving suggests there is an oversupply of replacements forcing farmers to dispose of these cows early in lactation. In order to develop a deeper understanding of herd turnover and replacement, future work could examine cow removals in lactation 2 onwards.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0297657
spellingShingle Emma N Taylor
Kulwant Channa
James Hanks
Nick M Taylor
Milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility, including age at first calving, on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation.
PLoS ONE
title Milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility, including age at first calving, on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation.
title_full Milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility, including age at first calving, on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation.
title_fullStr Milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility, including age at first calving, on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation.
title_full_unstemmed Milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility, including age at first calving, on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation.
title_short Milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility, including age at first calving, on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation.
title_sort milk recording data indicates the importance of fertility including age at first calving on the progression of first lactation cows to second lactation
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0297657
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