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Attitudes and personality of farm managers and association with cow culling rates and longevity in large-scale commercial dairy farms

Rilanto, Triin; Viidu, Dagni-Alice; Kaart, Tanel; Orro, Toomas; Viltrop, Arvo; Emanuelson, Ulf; Ferguson, Eamonn; Mõtus, Kerli

Attitudes and personality of farm managers and association with cow culling rates and longevity in large-scale commercial dairy farms Thumbnail


Authors

Triin Rilanto

Dagni-Alice Viidu

Tanel Kaart

Toomas Orro

Arvo Viltrop

Ulf Emanuelson

EAMONN FERGUSON eamonn.ferguson@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Health Psychology

Kerli Mõtus



Abstract

The farmer has the central role in determining cow culling policies on their farm and thus affecting cow longevity. The present study aimed to examine farm managers´ satisfaction, attitudes, personality traits and analyse the associations with dairy cow culling and longevity in large commercial dairy farms. Farm managers of 116 dairy herds rearing at least 100 cows in freestall barns were included. A questionnaire for the farm managers registered personal background information of respondent and included statements capturing their satisfaction, opinions and attitudes regarding dairy cow culling and longevity, farming in general, and a Ten Item Personality Inventory scoring. For each herd, the last 12 months cow culling rate (CR, excluding dairy sale) and herd mean age of culled cows (MAofCC) was obtained from the Estonian Livestock Performance Recording Ltd. A K-mean clustering algorithm was applied to subgroup farm managers based on their attitudes, opinions and personality traits. The yearly mean herd CR was 33.0% and MAofCC was 60.6 months. Farm managers´ were mostly dissatisfied with cow longevity and culling rates in their farms. Dissatisfaction with culling rates and longevity, priority for producing high milk yields over longevity and production-oriented attitude was associated with high culling rates and poor longevity. Farm managers' personality had an effect on herd culling rates and their attitudes explained one third of the variability of culling rates and longevity. Explaining the economic consequences of high culling rates and decreased longevity, improving the visibility of these parameters together with benchmarking could bring these issues into focus.

Citation

Rilanto, T., Viidu, D.-A., Kaart, T., Orro, T., Viltrop, A., Emanuelson, U., …Mõtus, K. (2022). Attitudes and personality of farm managers and association with cow culling rates and longevity in large-scale commercial dairy farms. Research in Veterinary Science, 142, 31-42. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rvsc.2021.11.006

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 29, 2021
Online Publication Date Nov 24, 2021
Publication Date 2022-01
Deposit Date Jan 31, 2022
Publicly Available Date Nov 25, 2022
Journal Research in Veterinary Science
Print ISSN 0034-5288
Electronic ISSN 1532-2661
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 142
Pages 31-42
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rvsc.2021.11.006
Keywords General Veterinary
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/7369167
Additional Information This article is maintained by: Elsevier; Article Title: Attitudes and personality of farm managers and association with cow culling rates and longevity in large-scale commercial dairy farms; Journal Title: Research in Veterinary Science; CrossRef DOI link to publisher maintained version: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.rvsc.2021.11.006; Content Type: article; Copyright: © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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