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Associations between routinely collected dairy herd improvement data and insemination outcome in UK dairy herds

HUDSON, CHRISTOPHER; GREEN, MARTIN

Authors

CHRISTOPHER HUDSON chris.hudson@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Dairy Herd Health and Production

MARTIN GREEN martin.green@nottingham.ac.uk
Professor of Cattle Health & Epidemiology



Abstract

Milk constituent concentrations in samples taken during early lactation are often used to generate proxy measures for energy balance in dairy herds. This study aimed to explore associations between these and other measures routinely recorded by dairy herd improvement schemes and insemination outcome, with an emphasis on the likely predictiveness of such measures for conception risk (the proportion of inseminations that are successful) at herd level. Data from 312 United Kingdom (UK) dairy herds were restructured so that each unit of data represented an insemination at less than 100 DIM. Milk constituent concentrations from first and second test day (corrected for the effects of season and DIM at sampling) were used as potential predictors of insemination outcome in a logistic regression model. Other predictors included representations of milk yield and other information routinely collected by DHIAs; random effects were used to account for clustering at cow and herd level. The final model included a large number of predictors, with a number of interaction and non-linear terms. The relative effect sizes of the measures of early lactation milk constituent concentrations were small. The full model predicted just under 64% of observed variation in herd-year conception risk (i.e. the proportion of inseminations that were successful in each herd in each calendar year): however, around 40% was accounted for by the herd-level random effect. The predictors based on early lactation milk constituent concentrations accounted for less than 0.5% of observed variation, representations of milk yield (both overall level of yield and early lactation curve shape) for around 7%, with the remaining 15% accounted for by DIM at insemination, parity, inter-service interval, year and month. These results suggest that early lactation milk constituent information is unlikely to predict herd conception risk to a useful extent. The large proportion of observed variation explained by the herd-level random effect suggests that there are unmeasured (in this study) or unmeasurable factors which are consistent within herd and are highly influential in determining herd conception risk.

Citation

HUDSON, C., & GREEN, M. (2018). Associations between routinely collected dairy herd improvement data and insemination outcome in UK dairy herds. Journal of Dairy Science, 101(12), 11262-11274. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2017-13962

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 3, 2018
Online Publication Date Oct 10, 2018
Publication Date Dec 1, 2018
Deposit Date Aug 7, 2018
Publicly Available Date Oct 11, 2019
Journal Journal of Dairy Science
Print ISSN 0022-0302
Electronic ISSN 1525-3198
Publisher American Dairy Science Association
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 101
Issue 12
Pages 11262-11274
DOI https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2017-13962
Keywords Fertility; Conception risk; Dairy cow; DHI data
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/958913
Publisher URL https://www.journalofdairyscience.org/article/S0022-0302(18)30940-8/fulltext

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