Department of Animal Science, One Shields Ave., University of California, Davis 95616, USA.
J Dairy Sci. 2013 Jan;96(1):605-13. doi: 10.3168/jds.2012-5485. Epub 2012 Oct 11.
Lameness and hoof health affect dairy cows as an animal welfare issue, in decreased milk production, and in premature culling. Selection schemes for dairy cattle focus on sire contribution to milk production, with little consideration of the cow's physical structure or disease probability. On 3 commercial California dairies, 6 phenotypic binary hoof traits that contribute to lameness were recorded: white line disease, sole ulcer, other claw horn lesions, foot rot (interdigital phlegmon), foot warts (digital dermatitis), and other lesions. Monthly lactation records were collected from December 2006 to April 2009 with weekly observations of hoof lesions for lame and dry cows. In addition to hoof lesion information, data on cows (n=5,043) included parentage, birth date, freshening date, lactation number, and date of lameness diagnosis. The prevalence of hoof lesions ranged from a low of 2.2% (foot rot) to a high of 17.1% (foot warts). The farm environment increased the odds ratio depending upon the lesion. Lameness was more common in early lactation and as lactation number increased. Using a threshold model, heritabilities and repeatabilities were estimated for each binary trait. The heritability for risk varied by lesion, with the higher estimates being 0.40 (95% confidence interval: 0.20-0.67) for digital dermatitis and 0.30 (95% confidence interval: 0.08-0.63) for sole ulcer. Including terms to account for cow productivity on either a 305-d mature-equivalent basis or a per-lactation basis had minimal effect on the heritability estimates, suggesting that selection for hoof health is not correlated with response to selection for greater milk production and that improvement could be made for both traits. The genetic component lends support for further genetic studies to identify loci contributing to some of the lesion phenotypes such as foot warts or sole ulcers, 2 of the top 3 causes of lameness in dairy cattle.
跛行和蹄部健康问题是奶牛的福利问题,会导致产奶量下降和提前淘汰。奶牛的选择方案主要集中在种公牛对产奶量的贡献上,而很少考虑奶牛的身体结构或患病概率。在加利福尼亚的 3 家商业奶牛场,记录了 6 种与跛行有关的表型二元蹄部性状:白线病、蹄底溃疡、其他蹄壳病变、腐蹄病(趾间黏液囊炎)、蹄疣(趾皮炎)和其他病变。从 2006 年 12 月到 2009 年 4 月收集了每月的泌乳记录,并对跛行和干奶牛进行每周的蹄部病变观察。除了蹄部病变信息外,关于奶牛(n=5043)的数据还包括亲代、出生日期、产犊日期、泌乳次数和跛行诊断日期。蹄部病变的患病率从 2.2%(腐蹄病)的低值到 17.1%(蹄疣)的高值不等。农场环境会根据病变增加患病的可能性。跛行在泌乳早期和泌乳次数增加时更为常见。使用阈值模型,估计了每个二元性状的遗传力和可重复性。每种病变的风险遗传力不同,其中较高的估计值为 0.40(95%置信区间:0.20-0.67),用于趾皮炎和 0.30(95%置信区间:0.08-0.63),用于蹄底溃疡。基于 305 天成熟当量或每次泌乳的基础,将奶牛的生产性能包含在模型中,对遗传力估计值的影响很小,这表明选择蹄部健康与选择更高产奶量的反应无关,并且可以同时提高这两个性状的生产性能。遗传因素为进一步的遗传研究提供了支持,以确定导致一些病变表型(如蹄疣或蹄底溃疡)的遗传位点,这两种病变是奶牛跛行的前 3 大原因之一。