4.4 Article

Economic evaluation of artificial insemination of sex-sorted semen on a Brown Swiss dairy farm-A case study

Journal

ANIMAL SCIENCE JOURNAL
Volume 90, Issue 4, Pages 597-603

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/asj.13156

Keywords

artificial insemination; Brown Swiss; dairy; farm management; sex-sorted semen

Funding

  1. [16X07910]

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Artificial insemination using sex-sorted semen is employed to efficiently increase the number of female dairy calves born. Previous studies have determined that using sex-sorted semen is beneficial to improve the management, but the mechanism by which it increases cattle numbers through objective indices of breeding remains unclear. This study focused on a Brown Swiss cattle herd in which frozen female sex-sorted semen was systematically employed to increase the number of cattle. We analyzed the correlation between the increase in the number of cattle and the screening accuracy of sex-sorted semen, measuring indices such as pregnancy rate and birth rate of female calves. Study revealed that: (1) production cost for female calves is influenced by the pregnancy rate, rate of female calves, and using sex-sorted semen is less expensive than using nonsorted semen; (2) improvements in screening accuracy nearly doubled the number of cows and tripled the number of heifers in 5 years; and (3) use of sex-sorted semen improved milk quality. The pregnancy rate was lower when sex-sorted semen was used, but the birth rate of heifers was improved. Results suggest that artificial insemination using sex-sorted semen is beneficial because it economically produces offspring to increase the herd.

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