4.7 Article

Mortality in Holstein-Friesian calves and replacement heifers, in relation to body weight and IGF-I concentration, on 19 farms in England

Journal

ANIMAL
Volume 3, Issue 8, Pages 1175-1182

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S175173110900456X

Keywords

calf; mortality; insulin-like growth factor-1; body weight

Funding

  1. DairyCo (Cirencester, Gloucestershire, UK)
  2. Defra (London, UK)

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The incidence of mortality and culling in Holstein-Friesian heifers from birth through first calving was determined on 19 daily farms selected from across southern England. The outcome of 1097 calvings was determined. Size (BW, heart girth, crown-rump length and height at withers) and insulin-like growth factor-1 concentration of live heifer calves were measured at a mean age of 26 +/- 0. 7 days (n = 506). Associations between the heifer-level variables and mortality were determined using clustered binary logistic regression. Perinatal mortality (stillbirths and mortality within the first 24 h of birth) of male and female calves was 7.9%. This figure was significantly higher in cases where calving assistance was required (19.1% v. 5.6%, P < 0.001) and in twin births (18.5% v. 70516, P < 0.05), and was lower in pluriparous v. primiparous dams (5.6% v. 12.1%, P < 0.01). On average, 6.8% of heifers died or were culled between 1 day and 6 months of age. Low BW at 1 month was associated with reduced subsequent survival up to 6 months. Between 6 months and first calving, a further 7.7% of heifers either died (42%) or were culled (58%); accidents and infectious disease accounted for the majority of calf deaths between 6 and 15 months, whereas infertility (16/450 animals served, 3.5%) was the main reason for culling following the start of the first breeding period. In total, 11 heifers (2.2%) were culled as freemartins; eight at birth and three around service. Overall, 14.5% of liveborn potential replacement heifers died or were culled before first calving.

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