Monitoring of Body Condition in Dairy Cows to Assess Disease Risk at the Individual and Herd Level

Author:

Rearte Ramiro12,Lorenti Santiago Nicolas3,Dominguez German4,de la Sota Rodolfo Luzbel25ORCID,Lacau-Mengido Isabel María26ORCID,Giuliodori Mauricio Javier57

Affiliation:

1. Cátedra de Higiene, Epidemiología y Salud Pública, Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias-Universidad Nacional de La Plata (FCV-UNLP), La Plata B1900AVW, Argentina

2. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires C1033AAJ, Argentina

3. Actividad Privada, Brandsen B1890AVW, Argentina

4. Actividad Privada, Venado Tuerto S2600GOZ, Argentina

5. Instituto de Investigaciones en Reproducción Animal (INIRA), Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias-Universidad Nacional de La Plata (FCV-UNLP), La Plata B1900AVW, Argentina

6. Instituto de Biología y Medicina Experimental-CONICET, Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires C1428ADN, Argentina

7. Cátedra de Fisiología, Facultad de Ciencias Veterinarias-Universidad Nacional de La Plata (FCV-UNLP), La Plata B1900AVW, Argentina

Abstract

A retrospective longitudinal study assessing the explanatory and predictive capacity of body condition score (BCS) in dairy cows on disease risk at the individual and herd level was carried out. Data from two commercial grazing herds from the Argentinean Pampa were gathered (Herd A = 2100 and herd B = 2600 milking cows per year) for 4 years. Logistic models were used to assess the association of BCS indicators with the odds for anestrus at the cow and herd level. Population attributable fraction (AFP) was estimated to assess the anestrus rate due to BCS indicators. We found that anestrus risk decreased in cows calving with BCS ≥ 3 and losing ≤ 0.5 (OR: 0.07–0.41), and that anestrus rate decreased in cohorts with a high frequency of cows with proper BCS (OR: 0.22–0.45). Despite aggregated data having a good explanatory power, their predictive capacity for anestrus rate at the herd level is poor (AUC: 0.574–0.679). The AFP varied along the study in both herds and tended to decrease every time the anestrous rate peaked. We conclude that threshold-based models with BCS indicators as predictors are useful to understand disease risk (e.g., anestrus), but conversely, they are useless to predict such multicausal disease events at the herd level.

Funder

UNLP

Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference32 articles.

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5. Dairy Australia (2017). InCalf Book for Dairy Farmers, Dairy Australia Limited. [2nd ed.].

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