Department of Animal Science, McGill University, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, QC H9X 3V9, Canada.
Department of Animal Science, McGill University, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, QC H9X 3V9, Canada.
J Dairy Sci. 2021 Jul;104(7):7944-7955. doi: 10.3168/jds.2020-19585. Epub 2021 Apr 15.
Lameness is a persistent and underreported health and welfare problem in the dairy industry, resulting in reduced cow performance and profitability as well as early culling. The study objectives were (1) to quantify the impact of the first instance of lameness, at different stages of lactation, on production and economic performance, and (2) to further quantify the impacts of the first instance of lameness when only cows that remain in the herd for at least 100 d in milk (DIM) and those that remain for 305 DIM are included in the analysis. A retrospective longitudinal study was conducted using pre-existing data from animal health records and Dairy Herd Improvement Association records. Data were edited based on selected inclusion criteria, yielding a data set containing records from 15,159 first-lactation Holstein cows from 120 herds with year of first calving between 2003 and 2014. Lame cows were assigned to 1 of 4 groups based on when in the lactation the first event of lameness occurred: transition (1-21 DIM), early lactation (22-100 DIM), mid-lactation (101-200 DIM), or late lactation (201+ DIM). Mid- and late-lactation lame cows were also stratified by cumulative milk yield before the lameness event. Healthy cows (i.e., no recorded lameness event) were randomly assigned for each lactation stage, with mid-lactation healthy and late-lactation healthy cows similarly stratified. Production performance (cumulative milk, fat, and protein yield) and economic performance [milk value, margin over feed cost (MOFC), and gross profit] were analyzed using a mixed model with herd as a random effect. Cumulative milk yields were 811 to 1,290 kg lower for lame cows than for healthy cows, with milk component yields undergoing similar reductions. Reductions in milk yield contributed to losses in milk value (-Can$527 to -Can$1,083; -US$419 to -US$862) and MOFC (-Can$510 to -Can$774; -US$406 to -US$616). Higher losses were reported using gross profit (-Can$753 to -Can$1,052; -US$599 to -US$837), which includes all lameness-related costs. Production and performance losses were smaller when 100 DIM and 305 DIM thresholds were applied (i.e., exclusion of cows culled before 100 and 305 DIM, respectively), however, mid- and late-lactation lame cows maintained high levels of significant losses for all 6 variables analyzed. Lameness also led to higher levels of culling, masking losses for transition and early-lactation lame cows in the 305-DIM analysis. Increasing producer understanding of the costs associated with lameness not only serves to provide insight to producers for more informed culling decisions, but may also help producers weigh the costs of adopting new methods and technologies targeted at reducing on-farm lameness.
跛行是奶牛养殖业中持续存在且未得到充分报告的健康和福利问题,会导致奶牛生产性能和盈利能力下降,以及提前淘汰。本研究的目的是:(1)量化不同泌乳阶段初次跛行对生产和经济性能的影响;(2)进一步量化初次跛行时,仅包括至少在泌乳 100 天(DIM)和至少在泌乳 305 DIM 时仍留在牛群中的牛的分析,对生产和经济性能的影响。本研究使用动物健康记录和奶牛改良协会记录中的现有数据进行回顾性纵向研究。根据选定的纳入标准编辑数据,得到了一个包含来自 120 个牛群的 15,159 头初产荷斯坦奶牛记录的数据集,这些牛群的首产年龄在 2003 年至 2014 年之间。根据初次跛行发生时的泌乳阶段,跛行牛被分为 4 组之一:过渡期(1-21 DIM)、早期泌乳期(22-100 DIM)、中期泌乳期(101-200 DIM)或晚期泌乳期(201+ DIM)。中期和晚期泌乳期跛行牛还按跛行前的累计牛奶产量进行分层。为每个泌乳阶段随机分配健康牛(即无记录的跛行事件),同样为中期泌乳健康牛和晚期泌乳健康牛分层。使用混合模型,以牛群为随机效应,分析生产性能(累计牛奶、脂肪和蛋白质产量)和经济性能[牛奶价值、饲料成本(MOFC)的边际利润和毛利润]。与健康牛相比,跛行牛的累计牛奶产量低 811-1290kg,牛奶成分产量也出现类似的降低。牛奶产量的减少导致牛奶价值(-Can$527 至 -Can$1,083;-US$419 至 -US$862)和 MOFC(-Can$510 至 -Can$774;-US$406 至 -US$616)的损失。使用毛利润报告的损失更高(-Can$753 至 -Can$1,052;-US$599 至 -US$837),其中包括所有与跛行相关的成本。当应用 100 DIM 和 305 DIM 阈值时(即分别剔除在 100 和 305 DIM 之前淘汰的牛),生产和性能损失较小,但中期和晚期泌乳期跛行牛的所有 6 个分析变量都保持着高水平的显著损失。跛行还导致了更高的淘汰率,掩盖了 305-DIM 分析中过渡期和早期泌乳期跛行牛的损失。增加生产者对跛行相关成本的认识,不仅有助于生产者做出更明智的淘汰决策,还可能帮助生产者权衡采用新方法和技术的成本,这些方法和技术旨在减少农场跛行。