Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10976674 Journal of Dairy Science 2014 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
In dairy cows, milk yield increases rapidly after parturition until a peak at around wk 6 of lactation. However, the description of the shape of the lactation curve is commonly based on weekly average milk yields. For a more detailed analysis of the milk production curve from the very beginning of lactation including the colostral period and the effect of colostrum yield on further lactational performance, the first 10 milkings after parturition, daily milk yields from d 1 to 28 of lactation, and the cumulative milk production on d 100 to 305 of lactation were investigated in 17 primiparous and 39 multiparous cows milked twice daily. Milk yield at the first milking after parturition (colostrum) ranged from 1.3 to 20.7 kg (Δ = 19.4 kg) in multiparous and from 1.8 to 10.9 kg in primiparous animals (Δ = 9.1 kg). At the tenth milking, milk production ranged from 9.2 to 21.5 kg (Δ = 12.3 kg) in multiparous and from 7.0 to 15.2 kg (Δ = 8.2 kg) in primiparous animals. Immediately after parturition, daily milk production increased rapidly, but after approximately 1 wk in lactation, the slope of the daily milk production curve flattened and continued more linear. A nonlinear regression equation was used to determine this timely change, which occurred earlier in primiparous (d 6.9 ± 0.3) than in multiparous cows (d 8.2 ± 0.2). The correlation between the amount of first colostrum and milk production during further lactation decreased already from 0.47 on d 5 to 0.32 on d 14. In multiparous cows, the correlation between total milk production of the previous 305 d standard lactation and the amount of first colostrum was not significant (correlation = 0.29), whereas the correlation with the daily production increased from 0.45 on d 5 to 0.69 on d 14. However, in primiparous animals, correlations between first-colostrum yield and daily milk yields up to d 28 of lactation were not significant, possibly due to the smaller sample size compared with multiparous animals. First-colostrum yield and cumulative milk production of 100, 200, and 305 lactation days were not significantly correlated in multiparous and primiparous cows. In conclusion, the milk production during the first few milkings is widely independent from the overall production level of a cow. Potentially, genetic selection toward lower milk yield during the very first days after parturition at a simultaneously high lactational performance may be a tool to ensure sufficient colostrum quality and to reduce the metabolic load around parturition.
Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Animal Science and Zoology
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