Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2441456 | Journal of Dairy Science | 2006 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Notable successes are decreases in the incidence of milk fever, clinical respiratory disease in adults, contagious mastitis, and clinical parasitism. There has also been improved protection through vaccination against coliform mastitis and bovine virus diarrhea. Since 1980, average herd size and milk production per cow have increased dramatically. Despite these increased demands on cows' metabolism and humans' management skills, the incidence of most common and important diseases has remained stable. Great progress has been made in understanding the biology of energy metabolism and immune function in transition dairy cows, the time at which the majority of disease occurs. Coupled with an emerging understanding of how best to provide for dairy cows' behavioral needs, transition cow management promises to be the foundation for progress in maintenance and enhancement of the health of dairy cows in the next 25 yr.
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Authors
S.J. LeBlanc, K.D. Lissemore, D.F. Kelton, T.F. Duffield, K.E. Leslie,