Analysis of lactating cows on commercial Austrian dairy farms: the influence of genotype and body weight on efficiency parameters
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Published:2019-07-29
Issue:2
Volume:62
Page:491-500
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ISSN:2363-9822
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Container-title:Archives Animal Breeding
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Arch. Anim. Breed.
Author:
Ledinek MariaORCID, Gruber Leonhard, Steininger Franz, Fuerst-Waltl Birgit, Zottl Karl, Royer Martin, Krimberger Kurt, Mayerhofer Martin, Egger-Danner Christa
Abstract
Abstract. The aim of this study was twofold: first, to evaluate the
influence of body weight on the efficiency of dairy cows, and second, to
analyze the current state of dairy cattle populations as part of the
Austrian Cattle Breeding Association's Efficient Cow project. Data of Fleckvieh (FV, dual-purpose Simmental), Fleckvieh×Red
Holstein (FV×RH), Holstein (HF) and Brown Swiss (BS) dairy cows
(161 farms, 6098 cows) were collected at each performance recording during
the year 2014. In addition to routinely recorded data (e.g., milk yield, fertility),
body weight, body measurements, body condition score (BCS) and individual
feed information were also collected. The following efficiency traits were
considered: body weight efficiency as the ratio of energy-corrected milk
(ECM) to metabolic body weight, feed efficiency (kilogram ECM per kilogram dry-matter intake) and energy efficiency expressed as the ratio of energy in milk to
energy intake. The relationship of milk yield to body weight was shown to be nonlinear.
Milk yield decreased in cows above the 750 kg body weight class for HF, BS
and FV×RH with 68 % RH genes, but less dramatically and later
for FV at 800 kg. This resulted in an optimum body weight for feed and
energy efficiency. BS and HF had the highest efficiency in a narrower and
lighter body weight range (550–700 kg) due to a stronger curvature of the
parabolic curve. Contrary to this, the efficiency of FV did not change as
much as it did in the dairy breeds with increasing body weight, meaning that
FV had a similar feed and energy efficiency in a range of 500–750 kg. The
breed differences disappeared when body weight ranged between 750 and
800 kg. The average body weight of the breeds studied (FV 722 kg, BS 649 and HF
662 kg) was in the optimum range. FV was located at the upper end of the
decreasing segment. In conclusion, an optimum body weight range for efficiency does exist, due
to the nonlinear relationship of milk yield and body weight. Specialized
dairy breeds seem to respond more intensively to body weight range than
dual-purpose breeds, due to the stronger curvature. Cows with medium weights
within a population are the most efficient. Heavy cows (>750 kg)
produce even less milk. A further increase in dairy cows' body weights
should therefore be avoided.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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