scholarly journals Effect of Calving Difficulties and Calf Mortality on Functional Longevity in Polish Holstein-Friesian Cows

Animals ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (10) ◽  
pp. 2792
Author(s):  
Małgorzata Morek-Kopeć ◽  
Andrzej Zarnecki ◽  
Ewa Ptak ◽  
Agnieszka Otwinowska-Mindur

Longevity is one of the functional traits that considerably affect dairy herd profitability. A Weibull proportional hazards model was used to evaluate the impact of difficult calvings and calf stillbirths on cow functional longevity, defined as length of productive life corrected for milk production. The data for analysis comprised calving ease and calf mortality scores of 2,163,426 calvings, 34.4% of which came from primiparous cows. The percentage of male calves was 53.4%. Calving ease was scored as “without assistance” (34.44%), “with assistance” (62.03%), “difficult—hard pull” (3.39%), and “very difficult, including caesarean section” (0.14%). Calf mortality scores were “live born” (94.21%) and “stillborn or died within 24 h” (5.79%). The Weibull proportional hazards model included classes of calving ease or calf mortality scores × parity (1, ≥2) × sex of calf as time-dependent fixed effect. The model also included time-dependent fixed effects of year × season, parity × stage of lactation, annual change in herd size, fat yield and protein yield, time-independent fixed effect of age at first calving, and time dependent random herd × year × season. In first-parity cows, very difficult birth of a bull or heifer increased the relative risk of culling, respectively, 2.18 or 1.26 times as compared with calving without assistance. In later parities, the relative risk of culling related to very difficult calving was 2.0 times (for male calves) and 1.33 times (for female calves) higher than the relative risk of culling associated with calving without assistance. Calf mortality showed a negative impact on longevity in both heifers and cows. First-parity stillbirth increased the relative risk of culling depending on sex of calf by 18% in females and by 15% in males; in later parities the increase of the relative risk of culling was lower (by 7% for females, 9% for males). Difficult calvings and their consequences, especially in primiparous cows, may negatively influence dairy herd profitability by reducing the length of cows’ productive life.

2004 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 13-22 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Tarrés ◽  
P. Puig ◽  
V. Ducrocq ◽  
J. Piedrafita

AbstractAn analysis of the length of productive life in the Bruna dels Pirineus beef breed was performed with a non-parametric approach giving an average value of 9 years of productive life, and a corresponding replacement rate of 11%. Using a proportional hazards model stratified by herd, the influence of calf birth weight and weight gain until weaning, calving difficulty, calving interval and age at first calving on length of productive life were studied. Two models were explored: the first one included time-dependent variables taking the current value of the covariate at each calving date, while the second one also comprised time-dependent interactions between the value of the covariate of the current calving and its mean value during the last (up to) three previous calvings. Results from the first model showed that the risk of culling increases with very high ages at first calving, increasing calving difficulties, very large calf birth weights, very small weight gains until weaning and very long calving intervals. Furthermore, results from the second model showed that these increases also depend upon a sequence of values for the same covariate in previous calvings. Finally, these higher risks of culling implied lower survival functions that increased replacement rates but only slightly decreased average performances.


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