INCITAP   20787
INSTITUTO DE CIENCIAS DE LA TIERRA Y AMBIENTALES DE LA PAMPA
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Association between blood β-hydroxybutyrate at 7 days postpartum and milk yield, disease occurrence and fertility in grazing dairy cattle with seasonal calving: a case study
Autor/es:
CHACON, CARLOS; PINEDO, PABLO; MCDANIEL, KAITLIN; BARTOLOME, JULIAN; MELENDEZ, PEDRO; POOCK, SCOTT
Revista:
ANIMAL PRODUCTION SCIENCE
Editorial:
CSIRO
Referencias:
Lugar: melbourne; Año: 2020 vol. 1 p. 1 - 6
ISSN:
1836-5787
Resumen:
Context. Ketosis in grazing cattle has been sparsely studied. A large commercial grazing dairy in southern Chile,representative of a significant proportion of the systems in the country, was used in this case study.Aims. The study had three objectives: (i) to establish a cut-off for b-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) concentration forsubclinical ketosis (SCK), and use this to measure the proportion of cows with SCK at 7 days postpartum in spring- andautumn-calving cows; (ii) to describe the relationship of SCK and other periparturient diseases and fertility; and (iii) tocompare milk yield of healthy cows and those affected by SCK in a dairy herd with autumn and spring parturitionsunder grazing conditions in southern Chile.Methods. During 2016, 234 cows with autumn parturitions and 632 cows with spring parturitions (n = 866) wereassessed for blood BHB at 7 days postpartum. A receiver operating characteristic analysis for a BHB cut-off value wascompleted. Models were developed for disease occurrence, culling risk, conception risk and pregnancy rate,considering SCK as the main explanatory variable.Key results.In total, 810 cows were used for the final analysis. The frequency of cows with SCK, based on the cut-offvalue obtained (BHB 1.1 mmol/L), was 22.2% at 7 days postpartum. The risk of SCK was higher (P < 0.0001) in cowscalving in spring (27.0%) than in autumn (10.3%), and in multiparous (24.6%) than primiparous cows (15.1%). Theseasonal difference in proportion of cows with SCK was parity-dependent, because the frequency of SCK inmultiparous cows was higher (P < 0.0005) in spring (32.0%) than autumn (10.1%), whereas SCK in primiparouscows showed no significant (P = 0.41) difference between spring (15.4%) and autumn (12.5%). Milk production up to100 days-in-milk was greater (P = 0.002) in cows with SCK (3394 kg) than without SCK (3015 kg). Disease occurrencewas higher (P < 0.0001) in cows with SCK and in multiparous cows (P < 0.0001). There was no difference in conceptionrisk at first service (P = 0.62) or in overall pregnancy rate (P = 0.90) between cows with and without SCK.Conclusions. Multiparous cows calving in spring had the highest risk of SCK (BHB 1.1 mmol/L). SCK wasassociated with higher milk yield and greater occurrence of other diseases, but not with reproductive performance.Implications. Grazing herds have challenges with SCK that may require different management strategies depending onthe calving season and the parity of the animals.