4.7 Article

Capitalizing on fine milk composition for breeding and management of dairy cows

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 99, Issue 5, Pages 4071-4079

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2015-10140

Keywords

dairy cattle; milk mid-infrared; management; breeding

Funding

  1. National Fund for Scientific Research (Brussels, Belgium)
  2. INTERREG IVB NWE program
  3. Ministry of Agriculture of Walloon Region of Belgium (Service Public de Wallonie, Direction generale operationnelle Agriculture, Ressources naturelles et Environnement DGARNE)
  4. European Commission [FP7-KBBE-211708, FP7-PEOPLE-ITN-2008-238562, FP7-KBBE-613689]

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The challenge of managing and breeding dairy cows is permanently adapting to changing production circumstances under socio-economic constraints. If managing and breeding address different timeframes of action, both need relevant phenotypes that allow for precise monitoring of the status of the cows, and their health, behavior, and well-being as well as their environmental impact and the quality of their products (i.e., milk and subsequently dairy products). Milk composition has been identified as an important source of information because it could reflect, at least partially, all these elements. Major conventional milk components such as fat, protein, urea, and lactose contents are routinely predicted by mid-infrared (MIR) spectrometry and have been widely used for these purposes. But, milk composition is much more complex and other nonconventional milk components, potentially predicted by MIR, might be informative. Such new milk-based phenotypes should be considered given that they are cheap, rapidly obtained, usable on a large scale, robust, and reliable. In a first approach, new phenotypes can be predicted from MIR spectra using techniques based on classical prediction equations. This method was used successfully for many novel traits (e.g., fatty acids, lactoferrin, minerals, milk technological properties, citrate) that can be then useful for management and breeding purposes. An innovation was to consider the longitudinal nature of the relationship between the trait of interest and the MIR spectra (e.g., to predict methane from MIR). By avoiding intermediate steps, prediction errors can be minimized when traits of interest (e.g., methane, energy balance, ketosis) are predicted directly from MIR spectra. In a second approach, research is ongoing to detect and exploit patterns in an innovative manner, by comparing observed with expected MIR spectra directly (e.g., pregnancy). All of these traits can then be used to define best practices, adjust feeding and health management, improve animal welfare, improve milk quality, and mitigate environmental impact. Under the condition that MIR data are available on a large scale, phenotypes for these traits will allow genetic and genomic evaluations. Introduction of novel traits into the breeding objectives will need additional research to clarify socio-economic weights and genetic correlations with other traits of interest.

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