Milk Delivery in Tropically-Adapted Neonatal Beef Calves

<b> </b>Across beef breeding herds of northern Australia, poor pre-partum nutrition of cows is consistently associated with increased calf wastage between confirmed pregnancy and weaning. With key nutrients at play (especially energy, protein, phosphorus and water) also being associated...

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Main Authors: Jarud Muller, Luis Prada e Silva, Geoffry Fordyce
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-03-01
Series:Proceedings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/36/1/126
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spelling doaj-a3312643a72c41c4b56540f557f9c9712020-11-25T01:41:51ZengMDPI AGProceedings2504-39002020-03-0136112610.3390/proceedings2019036126proceedings2019036126Milk Delivery in Tropically-Adapted Neonatal Beef CalvesJarud Muller0Luis Prada e Silva1Geoffry Fordyce2Department of Agriculture and Fisheries, Charters Towers 4820, AustraliaQueensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation, Centre for Animal Science, The University of Queensland, Gatton 4343, AustraliaQueensland Alliance for Agriculture and Food Innovation, Centre for Animal Science, The University of Queensland, Charters Towers 4820, Australia<b> </b>Across beef breeding herds of northern Australia, poor pre-partum nutrition of cows is consistently associated with increased calf wastage between confirmed pregnancy and weaning. With key nutrients at play (especially energy, protein, phosphorus and water) also being associated with milk yields, a specific problem mediating calf mortality is likely to be low milk production and delivery during the highest-mortality-risk period that is the first week after birth. Recent research demonstrated that milk-deprived newborn calves die of dehydration within 1&#8722;3 days. Newborn Brahman and tropical composite calves across three grazing herds (n = 75) and two penned herds (n = 106) were investigated. Calf milk uptake during the first 1&#8722;2 days of life was measured by plasma immunoglobulin (IgG) levels and overall milk uptake and health during the first two weeks of life was measured by growth rate from birth. Grazing calves with average IgG levels of 2247, 2508, and 2656 mg/100 mL had respective average growth rates of 0.5, 1.0, and 1.4 kg/d. Penned calves with average IgG levels of 2064, 2498 and 2504 mg/100 mL had respective average growth rates of 0.6, 1.0, and 1.4 kg/d. The association between calf immunoglobulin uptake and initial growth demonstrates individual variation between tropical beef calves for early milk uptake and that risk factors limiting milk delivery in the first days of life would place calves at greater risk of poor health and mortality.https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/36/1/126calfsurvivalneonatalmilk
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jarud Muller
Luis Prada e Silva
Geoffry Fordyce
spellingShingle Jarud Muller
Luis Prada e Silva
Geoffry Fordyce
Milk Delivery in Tropically-Adapted Neonatal Beef Calves
Proceedings
calf
survival
neonatal
milk
author_facet Jarud Muller
Luis Prada e Silva
Geoffry Fordyce
author_sort Jarud Muller
title Milk Delivery in Tropically-Adapted Neonatal Beef Calves
title_short Milk Delivery in Tropically-Adapted Neonatal Beef Calves
title_full Milk Delivery in Tropically-Adapted Neonatal Beef Calves
title_fullStr Milk Delivery in Tropically-Adapted Neonatal Beef Calves
title_full_unstemmed Milk Delivery in Tropically-Adapted Neonatal Beef Calves
title_sort milk delivery in tropically-adapted neonatal beef calves
publisher MDPI AG
series Proceedings
issn 2504-3900
publishDate 2020-03-01
description <b> </b>Across beef breeding herds of northern Australia, poor pre-partum nutrition of cows is consistently associated with increased calf wastage between confirmed pregnancy and weaning. With key nutrients at play (especially energy, protein, phosphorus and water) also being associated with milk yields, a specific problem mediating calf mortality is likely to be low milk production and delivery during the highest-mortality-risk period that is the first week after birth. Recent research demonstrated that milk-deprived newborn calves die of dehydration within 1&#8722;3 days. Newborn Brahman and tropical composite calves across three grazing herds (n = 75) and two penned herds (n = 106) were investigated. Calf milk uptake during the first 1&#8722;2 days of life was measured by plasma immunoglobulin (IgG) levels and overall milk uptake and health during the first two weeks of life was measured by growth rate from birth. Grazing calves with average IgG levels of 2247, 2508, and 2656 mg/100 mL had respective average growth rates of 0.5, 1.0, and 1.4 kg/d. Penned calves with average IgG levels of 2064, 2498 and 2504 mg/100 mL had respective average growth rates of 0.6, 1.0, and 1.4 kg/d. The association between calf immunoglobulin uptake and initial growth demonstrates individual variation between tropical beef calves for early milk uptake and that risk factors limiting milk delivery in the first days of life would place calves at greater risk of poor health and mortality.
topic calf
survival
neonatal
milk
url https://www.mdpi.com/2504-3900/36/1/126
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