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Dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system

OBJECTIVE: We determined the impact of maintaining pasture-based dairy cows and calves together over 100 days on cow milk production, cow and calf behavior, and calf liveweight and carcass quality. METHODS: Six Holstein-Friesian cows and their male calves were monitored for 106±8.6 days. Cows were t...

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Autores principales: Mac, Sarah E., Lomax, Sabrina, Clark, Cameron E. F.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Animal Bioscience 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9834721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35798037
http://dx.doi.org/10.5713/ab.22.0135
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author Mac, Sarah E.
Lomax, Sabrina
Clark, Cameron E. F.
author_facet Mac, Sarah E.
Lomax, Sabrina
Clark, Cameron E. F.
author_sort Mac, Sarah E.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: We determined the impact of maintaining pasture-based dairy cows and calves together over 100 days on cow milk production, cow and calf behavior, and calf liveweight and carcass quality. METHODS: Six Holstein-Friesian cows and their male calves were monitored for 106±8.6 days. Cows were temporarily separated twice a day for milking with calves remaining in the paddock. Cow and calf behaviors were recorded via scan sampling at 6 different timepoints, for the first 7 days and twice a week thereafter. Calves were weighed weekly and immediately processed for meat quality and rumen development analysis at 106±8.6 days. Daily cow milk yields were collected from enrollment until 109±8.6 days (3 days post-weaning). RESULTS: The average daily gain of calves was 1.4±0.73 kg/d, with an average carcass dressing percentage of 59%. Calves had the greatest frequency of observed close proximity to cow and suckling in the first two weeks and decreased with experiment duration. During separation for milking, cow vocalizations and attempts to return to their calf decreased over time. Reticulorumen weight was on target for calf age, but as a proportion of total stomach weight was lower than industry averages of calves the same age due to the larger abomasum. Cows produced an average of 12±7.6 kg of milk yield per day over the 3-days before the calves were weaned and increased to mean of 31±8.3 kg/d the 3 days after weaning, indicating a consumption of close to 20 kg per calf per day. CONCLUSION: The impact of a pasture-based cow-calf rearing system on cow and calf behavior and the potential for high levels of calf liveweight gain when provided ad-libitum milk and feed were determined. Further research is required to determine the practicality of replicating such systems with large herds and impact on reared calves post-weaning.
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spelling pubmed-98347212023-02-01 Dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system Mac, Sarah E. Lomax, Sabrina Clark, Cameron E. F. Anim Biosci Article OBJECTIVE: We determined the impact of maintaining pasture-based dairy cows and calves together over 100 days on cow milk production, cow and calf behavior, and calf liveweight and carcass quality. METHODS: Six Holstein-Friesian cows and their male calves were monitored for 106±8.6 days. Cows were temporarily separated twice a day for milking with calves remaining in the paddock. Cow and calf behaviors were recorded via scan sampling at 6 different timepoints, for the first 7 days and twice a week thereafter. Calves were weighed weekly and immediately processed for meat quality and rumen development analysis at 106±8.6 days. Daily cow milk yields were collected from enrollment until 109±8.6 days (3 days post-weaning). RESULTS: The average daily gain of calves was 1.4±0.73 kg/d, with an average carcass dressing percentage of 59%. Calves had the greatest frequency of observed close proximity to cow and suckling in the first two weeks and decreased with experiment duration. During separation for milking, cow vocalizations and attempts to return to their calf decreased over time. Reticulorumen weight was on target for calf age, but as a proportion of total stomach weight was lower than industry averages of calves the same age due to the larger abomasum. Cows produced an average of 12±7.6 kg of milk yield per day over the 3-days before the calves were weaned and increased to mean of 31±8.3 kg/d the 3 days after weaning, indicating a consumption of close to 20 kg per calf per day. CONCLUSION: The impact of a pasture-based cow-calf rearing system on cow and calf behavior and the potential for high levels of calf liveweight gain when provided ad-libitum milk and feed were determined. Further research is required to determine the practicality of replicating such systems with large herds and impact on reared calves post-weaning. Animal Bioscience 2023-02 2022-06-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9834721/ /pubmed/35798037 http://dx.doi.org/10.5713/ab.22.0135 Text en Copyright © 2023 by Animal Bioscience https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Mac, Sarah E.
Lomax, Sabrina
Clark, Cameron E. F.
Dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system
title Dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system
title_full Dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system
title_fullStr Dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system
title_full_unstemmed Dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system
title_short Dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system
title_sort dairy cow and calf behavior and productivity when maintained together on a pasture-based system
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9834721/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35798037
http://dx.doi.org/10.5713/ab.22.0135
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