4.7 Article

A stochastic animal life cycle simulation model for a whole dairy farm system model: Assessing the value of combined heifer and lactating dairy cow reproductive management programs

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 106, Issue 5, Pages 3246-3267

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2022-22396

Keywords

dairy farm simulation; RuFaS; reproductive management programs; economic evaluation

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This analysis presents a stochastic herd simulation model to evaluate the reproductive and economic performance of different reproductive management programs for heifers and lactating cows. The study found that the interaction between heifer and lactating cow reproductive management programs significantly influences herd economic performance, primarily due to heifer rearing costs and replacement heifer supply.
This analysis introduces a stochastic herd simulation model and evaluates the estimated reproductive and economic performance of combinations of reproductive management programs for both heifers and lactating cows. The model simulates the growth, reproductive performance, production, and culling for individual animals and integrates individual animal outcomes to represent herd dynamics daily. The model has an ex-tensible structure, allowing for future modification and expansion, and has been integrated into the Ruminant Farm Systems model, a holistic dairy farm simulation model. The herd simulation model was used to compare outcomes of 10 reproductive management scenarios based on common practices on US farms with combina-tions of estrous detection (ED) and artificial insemina-tion (AI), synchronized estrous detection (synch-ED) and AI, timed AI (TAI, 5-d CIDR-Synch) programs for heifers; and ED, a combination of ED and TAI (ED-TAI, Presynch-Ovsynch), and TAI (Double-Ovsynch) with or without ED during the reinsemination period for lactating cows. The simulation was run for a 1,000-cow (milking and dry) herd for 7 yr, and we used the outcomes from the final year to evaluate results. The model accounted for incomes from milk, sold calves, and culled heifers and cows, as well as costs from breeding, AI, semen, pregnancy diagnosis, and calf, heifer, and cow feed. We found that the interaction between heifer and lactating dairy cow reproductive management pro-grams influences herd economic performance primarily due to heifer rearing costs and replacement heifer sup-ply. The greatest net return (NR) was achieved when combining heifer TAI and cow TAI without ED during the reinsemination period, whereas the lowest NR was obtained when combining heifer synch-ED with cow ED.

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