4.7 Article

The first week following insemination is the period of major pregnancy failure in pasture-grazed dairy cows

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 105, Issue 11, Pages 9253-9270

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2021-21773

Keywords

pasture-grazed dairy cows; pregnancy success; embryonic loss; bovine reproduction

Funding

  1. Pillars of a New Dairy System research program
  2. New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation, and Employment (Wellington) [DRCX1302]
  3. AgResearch Strategic Science Investment Fund (Christchurch, New Zealand)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study found that the pregnancy success rate of dairy cows in a seasonal, pasture-grazed system varies at different developmental stages. The major developmental events contributing to pregnancy failure in the first week after fertilization are fertilization failure and embryonic arrest before the morula stage. Pregnancy failure in the second week is primarily associated with embryo elongation failure. Risk factors for pregnancy success related to the cows include the interval between calving and insemination, as well as plasma progesterone concentrations on day 7, while the insemination sire is associated with pregnancy outcome.
A 60% pregnancy success for inseminations is targeted to optimize production efficiency for dairy cows within a seasonal, pasture-grazed system. Routine measures of pregnancy success are widely available but are limited, in practice, to a gestation stage beyond the first 28 d. Although some historical data exist on embryonic mortality before this stage, productivity of dairy systems and genetics of the cows have advanced significantly in recent decades. Accordingly, the aim was to construct an updated estimate of pregnancy success at key developmental stages during the first 70 d after insemination. Blood samples were collected for progesterone concentrations on d 0 and 7. A temporal series of 4 groups spanning fertilization through d 70 were conducted on 4 seasonal, pasture-grazed dairy farms (n = 1,467 cows) during the first 21 d of the seasonal breeding period. Morphological examination was undertaken on embryos collected on d 7 (group E7) and 15 (group E15), and pregnancy was diagnosed via ultrasonography on approximately d 28 and 35 (group E35) as well as d 70 (group E70). Fertilization, embryo, and fetal evaluation for viability established a pregnancy success pattern. Additionally, cow and on-farm risk factor variables associated with pregnancy success were evaluated. We estimated pregnancy success rates of 70.9%, 59.1%, 63.8%, 62.3%, and 56.7% at d 7, 15, 28, 35, and 70, respectively. Fertilization failure (15.8%) and embryonic arrest before the morula stage (10.3%) were the major developmental events contributing to first-week pregnancy failures. Embryo elongation failure of 7% contributed to pregnancy failure during the second week. The risk factors for pregnancy success that were related to the cows included interval between calving and insemination, and d-7 plasma progesterone concentrations, whereas insemination sire was associated with pregnancy outcome. Most pregnancy failure occurs during the first week among seasonal-calving pasture-grazed dairy cows.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available