Managing Cow Lactation Cycles - The Cattle Site
Managing Cow Lactation Cycles - The Cattle Site
Managing Cow Lactation Cycles - The Cattle Site
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Poor feeding management of cows can lead to shorter, lower yielding
lactations and increase calving interval. This report by John Moran from Heifer International
Asia Dairy Network explains the changing feed requirements of cows over Revealing the diversity of genes
the lactation cycle and how to match this with cow genetics. behind better alfalfa hay Thermo Fisher Scientific
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The lactation cycle
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Cows must calve to produce milk and the lactation cycle is the period between
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one calving and the next.
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The cycle is split into four phases, the early, mid and late lactation (each of my soup
about 120 days, or d) and the dry period (which should last as long as 65 d). In
an ideal world, cows calve every 12 months. 23 June 2021
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A number of changes occur in cows as they progress through different stages
replacement heifers helps
of lactation.
protect investment
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As well as variations in milk production, there are changes in feed intake and
body condition, and stage of pregnancy. Figure 1 presents the interrelationships
Tips to Improve the Success of
between feed intake, milk yield and live weight for a Friesian cow with a 14
Weaning Beef Calves
month inter-calving interval, hence a 360 d lactation.
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Following calving, a cow may start producing 10 kg/d of milk, rise to a peak of
20 kg/d by about 7 weeks into lactation then gradually fall to 5 kg/d by the end
of lactation.
Although her maintenance requirements will not vary, she will need more
dietary energy and protein as milk production increases then less when
production declines. However to regain body condition in late lactation, she will
require additional energy.
Cows usually use their own body condition for about 12 weeks after calving, to
provide energy in addition to that consumed. The energy released is used to
produce milk, allowing them to achieve higher peak production than would be
possible from their diet alone.
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07/07/2021 Managing Cow Lactation Cycles - The Cattle Site
To do this, cows must have sufficient body condition available to lose, and
therefore they must have put it on late in the previous lactation or during the dry
period.
There are a number of obstacles to feeding the herd well in early lactation to
maximise the peak. The foremost of these is voluntary food intake.
After calving, it takes time for the rumen to “stretch” and the papillae to regrow.
It is not until weeks 10-12 that appetite reaches its full potential.
Dry period
Maintaining
(or increasing) body condition during the dry period is the key to
ensuring cows have adequate body reserves for early lactation.
If cows calve with adequate body reserves, they can cycle within two or three
months after calving. If cows calve in poor condition, milk production suffers in
early lactation because body reserves are not available to contribute energy.
In fact, dietary energy can be channelled towards weight gain rather being
made available from the desired weight loss. For this reason, high feeding
levels in early lactation cannot make up for poor body condition at calving.
The two major factors determining total lactation yield are peak lactation and
the rate of decline from this peak. In temperate dairy systems, total milk yield
for 300 day lactation can be estimated by multiplying peak yield by 200.
Hence a cow peaking at 20 litres per day (L/d) should produce 4000 L/lactation,
while a peak of 30 L/d equates to a 6000 L full lactation milk yield. This is
based on a rate of decline of 7 to 8 per cent per month from peak yield, that is
every month the cow produces, on average, 7 to 8 per cent of peak yield less
than in the previous month.
This level of persistency is the target for well managed, pasture-based herds in
temperate regions.
Actual values can vary from 3 to 4 per cent per month in fully fed, lot fed cows
to 12 per cent or more per month in very poorly fed cows, for example during a
severe dry season following a good wet season in the tropics.
• nutrient intake
following peak yield
• body condition at calving
Generally speaking, the higher the milk yield at peak, the lower its persistency
in percentage terms.
Underfeeding of cows immediately post-calving reduces peak yield but also has
adverse effects on persistency and fertility. Dairy cows have been bred to utilise
body reserves for additional milk production, but high rates of live weight loss
will delay the onset of oestrus.
Underfeeding of high genetic merit cows in early lactation is one of the biggest
nutritionally induced problems facing many small holder farmers in the humid
tropics, because they often do not have the necessary improvements in feeding
systems to utilise high genetic potential.
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If imported high genetic quality cows are not well fed, milk production is
compromised, but of more importance, they will not cycle until many months
post-calving.
Table 1 and Figure 2 present data for milk yield over 300 day lactations in cows
with various peak milk yields and lactation persistencies.
Such data provides the basis of herd management guidelines for dairy systems
with 12 month calving intervals. Depending on herd fertility, hence target
lactation lengths, similar guidelines could be developed for 15 or 18 month
calving intervals.
Table 1 and Figure 2 only present data for cows with peak yields of 15, 20 and
25 L milk/day.
Small holder dairy farms in the humid tropics with good feeding and herd
management should be able to achieve 15 L/day peak yield, and for those with
high genetic merit cows, 20 or 25L/day is realistic.
Lactation persistencies of less than 8 per cent per month may be achievable in
tropical dairy feedlots but more realistic persistencies are the 8 to 12 per cent
per month presented in the Table 1 and Figure 2.
Virtually every small holder farmer records daily milk yield of his or her cows, so
they know peak yield and can easily determine the monthly rate of decline,
providing a simple monitoring tool to assess their level of feeding management.
Unless feeding management can be improved, it may be better in the long run
to import cows of lower genetic merit.
For example, importers may request “5000 L cows” (that is cows that peak at
25 L/day under good feeding management, with a persistency of 8 per
cent/mth).
If, through poor feeding, their persistency is reduced to 12 per cent per month,
300 d lactation yields are only 3900 L and they do not cycle for many months
after calving, “4000 L cows” may be a better investment. From Table 1, such
cows would produce similar milk yields if they could be fed to 8 per cent per
month milk persistency and they are more likely to cycle earlier.
Poor feeding management of potentially high yielding cows can create many
problems.
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07/07/2021 Managing Cow Lactation Cycles - The Cattle Site
Lactation anoestrus can occur as the cows are forced to utilise more of their
body reserves in early lactation. This can lead to low peak milk yields and
shortened lactation lengths.
Cows will dry off prematurely if they receive insufficient feed nutrients to
maintain viable processes of milk production in their mammary tissue.
The impact of decreasing lactation lengths on 300 day lactation milk yields and
average daily milk yields are presented in Table 2. These data are based on the
same persistency data used in Table 1. The penalties for these shortened
lactation lengths are presented in Table 3.
Compared to 10 month lactations, inherently poor yielding cows with low peak
milk yields can lose 20 to 160 L milk through only 9 months milking or 90 to 360
L milk if only milking for 8 months.
Following higher peak milk yields, this will increase to penalties of 30 to 270 L
milk for 9 month to 120 to 600 L for 8 month lactation lengths. This can have a
big effect on the herd’s rolling herd average which can be reduced by 0.3 to 2.0
L/cow/day for the extreme values presented in Table 2 and 3.
These tables are based on 300 day lactation lengths, that is under an ideal
situation where cows calve down every 12 months.
Ideally cows should be managed to have a two month dry period to allow the
mammary tissue to recuperate before the next lactation. However, lactation
lengths of just 8 months followed by dry periods of another 8 months are all too
common in many tropical small holder dairy farms. This then equates to only 50
per cent of the adult cows milking at any one time.
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