Author:
O'Rourke PK,Sullivan RM,Neale JA
Abstract
Mortality and wastage rates and lifetime productivity were studied over 4800 cow years from 1981 to 1990 with continuous mating and minimal management in the semi-arid tropics at Kidman Springs, Northern Territory. The proportional hazards model was used to estimate age-specific mortality and wastage rates, adjusted for cohort effects. Annual breeder mortality rate averaged 11.5%, with similar rates in the range 9.0-12.0% for 2-9-year olds, increasing to 15.5% for 10-year-olds, 17.9% for 11-year-olds, and >20% for older cows. A further 20.8% of the cows that calved failed to rear the calf to branding. Wastage included mortalities and physical culls but minimal discretionary culls based on reproductive performance or maximum age. The wastage rate averaged 16.7%, ranged from 11.1 to 14.4% for 2-9-year-olds, increased to 21.1% for 10-year-olds and 34.3% for 11-year-olds, and exceeded 50% for older cows. The heifer replacement rate to maintain a stable herd size was 16.3%. Typical lifetime productivity up to 10 years of age in this harsh north-western environment was 3.1 calves reared over a lifetime of 6.5 years in the breeding herd, at a rate of 44.5% calves per year. Timing of first pregnancy was identified as a useful predictor of lifetime productivity when overall productivity was low. Cows that were lactating as 2-year-olds reared 4.0 calves in their lifetime up to 10 years of age, cows pregnant at this age reared 3.2 calves, and non-pregnant cows reared only 2.6 calves.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
6 articles.
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