Elsevier

Journal of Dairy Science

Volume 91, Issue 2, February 2008, Pages 818-825
Journal of Dairy Science

Article
Environmental Effects on Conception Rates of Holsteins in New York and Georgia

https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2007-0306Get rights and content
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Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the compounded impact on conception rates (CR) of the effects of milk production, service month, and days in milk (DIM) by using recent artificial insemination records of Holsteins in New York (NY) and Georgia (GA). Dairy Herd Improvement records were obtained from Dairy Records Management Systems in Raleigh, North Carolina. After removing records with lactations >1 and uncertain and extreme records (records without a calving or birth date, with days to service after calving of <21 or >250, and without the next calving date), the final data set comprised 298,015 service records for 160,879 cows and 23,366 service records for 12,184 cows in NY and GA, respectively, from 2000 to 2003. The analytical model included DIM class, milk-production level, service month, the covariate of cow's age at calving, and all 2-way interactions. The 2 states were analyzed separately. In general across the 2 states, CR declined as milk production increased, and CR declined during the hottest months. Conception rate was similar in NY and GA, at approximately 55% from December to April. In NY, CR declined by approximately 10% in May and June and mostly recovered by July. In GA, the CR started declining in May, bottomed at 31% in September, and did not recover until December. The difference in CR between high- and low-producing cows was 7% in NY and 6% in GA. That difference was the strongest from June to July in GA (15%) and was more uniform in NY. The increase in CR with increasing DIM varied across service season. The CR was nearly flat from 50 to 125 DIM in NY for all seasons, except for a large increasing trend in spring. In GA, there was also an increasing trend in fall. Conception rates were similar in NY and GA between December and May, and were strongly influenced by heat stress in GA from June to November. A decline in CR for reasons other than heat stress was present in both states in late spring. High production resulted in a faster decline of the CR in GA under heat stress. Models analyzing service records should include the DIM × season × region interaction.

Key words

conception rate
fertility
Holstein

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