4.7 Article

Effects of weaning strategies on health, hematology, and productivity in Holstein dairy calves

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 106, Issue 10, Pages 7008-7019

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2022-22738

Keywords

calf health; weaning pace; weaning age

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study examined the effects of calf weaning age and pace on performance, blood, and health parameters in dairy calves. The results showed that higher weaning age led to increased respiration rate, while gradual-weaned calves had lower respiratory and heart rates. Fecal score increased in late-weaned groups and significantly increased in gradually weaned groups. Average daily gain was lower in the late-abrupt group, while gradually weaned groups had increased average daily gain. Grain intake change was greater in gradually weaned groups. Calf health is affected by both age and pace of weaning, with different health parameters being affected differently.
Weaning strategies in dairy calves vary considerably, though the effect on animal health is unclear. This study examined the effects of calf weaning age (6 vs. 8 wk) and pace (abrupt vs. gradual) on performance, blood, and health parameters in dairy calves. The experiment consisted of a 2 x 2 factorial arrangement of treat-ments, where the factors included weaning age (early vs. late) and weaning pace (abrupt vs. gradual). Hol-stein calves (n = 72), blocked by sex and birth weight, were randomly assigned to one of 4 treatments (n = 18 per treatment): early-abrupt (EA), early-gradual (EG), late-abrupt (LA), and late-gradual (LG). Milk replacer (24% crude protein, 17% fat; up to 1,200 g/d) was fed twice daily; water, calf starter (18% crude protein), and chopped alfalfa hay were fed ad libitum. Daily intakes of milk replacer, calf starter, and forage were recorded from birth until end of weaning. Body weight, selected health measures, blood hematology, and fecal scores were obtained 1 d preweaning and 1 d postweaning. Calves were orally bolused with a rumen pH logger for the last 3 d of the weaning transition and rumen pH was measured continuously. Data were analyzed with age, pace, age x pace interaction, birthweight, and sex as fixed effects, and starting date as a random effect. Greater age at weaning increased respiration, whereas gradual-weaned calves had lower respiration rate. Heart rate was lower in gradual than in abrupt weaned groups. Fecal score had a marginal increase in late-weaned groups and significantly increased in gradually weaned groups. No difference was detected in body core temperature by age, pace, or interaction. During the weaning transition, average daily gain was lower in LA than EA and gradually weaned groups had an increased average daily gain. Change in grain intake, but not forage intake, was greater in gradually weaned groups. Mean rumen pH marginally increased from EG to LG and from LA to LG. No difference was detected among treatments in red or white blood cell counts, and hemoglobin. Procalcitonin was marginally highest in the LA group, while blood hematocrit increased in abruptly weaned groups. Overall, calf health is affected by both age and pace of weaning, though the health parameters affected by age and pace differ.

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